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Tymon Brown on Casco Bay, working as a lobster fisherman seasonally in between films

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Tymon Brown

Tymon Brown on Casco Bay, working as a lobster fisherman seasonally in between films
New Cinema Club Relaunches with Egalitarian Focus on Emerging Filmmakers
Tymon Brown on Casco Bay, working as a lobster fisherman seasonally in between films
It was long before the worst of times that short-form filmmaking constituted a battle whose success rate we might call Sisyphean; or, quoting New Cinema Club co-founder Tymon Brown, “No one sees these things. The hardest part of making a movie is getting it seen. Nobody gives a shit about your project you broke your back for. There’s so many movies made with ‘a lot of hard work’ and ‘a lot of love’ and they go nowhere.” But having connections with New Cinema Club—the monthly, New York-based program of four-to-five shorts by fresh, young, diverse filmmakers and a post-screening Q & A—over the past couple years bears especially bitter fruit: their first event, in September 2018, sold out Brooklyn’s hip and emphatically happening movie-themed bar Videology, turning away something like 90 people who traveled on a Wednesday night for work with no imaginable reputation. Movies were greeted in a...
See full article at The Film Stage
  • 8/12/2020
  • by Nick Newman
  • The Film Stage
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