The Cosmonaut
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The Cosmonaut | |
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Directed by | Nicolás Alcalá |
Produced by | Carola Rodríguez Bruno Teixidor |
Starring | Katrine De Candole Leon Ockenden Max Wrottesley |
Cinematography | Luis Enrique Carrión |
Edited by | Carlos Serrano Azcona Nicolas Alcalá |
Music by | Joan Valent |
Release date |
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Country | Spain |
Language | English |
Budget | €860,000 |
The Cosmonaut (El Cosmonauta) is a Spanish science-fiction film, directed by Nicolás Alcalá and produced by Carola Rodríguez and Bruno Teixidor. It premiered in May 2013. The first feature-length project of Riot Cinema Collective is notable for its use of crowdfunding and Creative Commons license in its production.
Plot
In 1967, two young friends, Stas and Andrei, arrive to the newly built Star City (near Moscow) where the first cosmonauts trained to go into space, and where a race against the clock to beat the Americans into space takes place.
Stas and Andrei will witness first-hand the political plots, the fights for power and the successes and failures of the Soviet Union in some of the greatest achievements of the 20th century. They will meet Yulia, a communications technician, with whom they will strike up a strong friendship, always close to love but never consummated.
Influences
The main influences behind The Cosmonaut's conception and filmmaking approach are the works of some of the world's most renowned filmmakers. The project's dossier[1] mentions specifically the names of Wong Kar-wai (and his main cinematographer, Christopher Doyle), Andrei Tarkovsky, José Luis Guerín, and Robert Bresson, among others. There are many links especially to Andrei Tarkovsky's body of work either thematically (the main themes of the films of memory, lost love, and reality), or plot-related (the film's two main characters, Andrei and Stas Arsenievich, share Andrei Tarkovsky's name and patronymic, respectively). These ties are more evident through a look in the collaborators’ list: among others, the names of Eduard Artemyev, and Marina Tarkovskaya (Tarkovky's sister).
The fictional Program K, whose hummingbird icon is one of the main images used in the project's promotion, and which also gives its name to the virtual community of producers of the film, is based on the real Soviet projects that attempted to place a Soviet cosmonaut on the Moon.
Production
The idea behind The Cosmonaut emerged from two main sources: a) the conversations between Nicolás Alcalá and Bruno Teixidor (the main creative minds behind the project's visual looks) about conspiracies, the Lost Cosmonauts theories and the Soviet space program; and b) the poetry book Poetics for Cosmonauts, written by Henry Pierrot. Throughout the time it was developed, the main plot core underwent a lot of changes, although some key elements remained through all the process, mainly the principal plot element (the return of an astronaut to Earth after a long trip to the Moon). After the reading of Poetics for Cosmonauts, the script changed to its present form. The preproduction for the short film started in October–November 2008.
2009
In January 2009, the project underwent its most radical changes: the film went from being a short film released and produced in a traditional way, to a feature-length film funded through Crowdfunding and released for free under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.[citation needed]
Crowdfunding
Inspired by productions such as A Swarm of Angels and Artemis Eternal, The Cosmonaut is the first Spanish feature film that makes use of the crowdfunding financing method. There were two ways to get involved in The Cosmonaut’s production:[2]
- First, as a regular producer. From an initial contribution of 2 euros, a contributor may be listed as a “producer” in the film credits, receiving a welcome pack, and a ticket for the drawing of one of the cosmonauts’ suits that will be used in the film. Further investments could be used to buy merchandising items in the film's online store.[citation needed]
- Secondly, as a movie investor. From an initial investment of 100 euros, a contributor can own a percentage of the film's profits.[citation needed]
Being a cinematographic project whose spread is based mostly in the use of social networks, and synergy between audience and creators, the network material of the movie is centered mostly in the creation of a fan community. Producers, regardless of their monetary participation in the film, form part of Programme K, a social group in which they can relate between each other, follow the development of the film, and take advantage of special perks and draws for Programme K members.[citation needed]
Release
The film, when finished, will be released on the Internet[citation needed] available for download and in HD. Also, besides the full movie on HD, all raw footage shot during the movie's filming will be uploaded too. As the film is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, the users will be able to download, lend, re-cut or use the film footage in any way they wish. This way, the audience not only will be allowed, but also encouraged by the producers themselves, to create new versions of the film and other derivative works.[citation needed]
2010
Between December 2009 and June 2010, the Riot Cinema team worked in modernizing the previous business model. On 2 June 2010, the new model, called “The Plan”, was launched in a press conference by the people in charge of the company. It provides the project with some developments. These developments increase the project approach and infrastructure, keeping its previous features, but, in general, taking them a step further.[citation needed]
Crowdfunding and financing
A totally new funding plan is introduced in the business model. While in the old model the film funding was through crowdfunding and private investment, in “The Plan”, a three-staged progressive plan is detailed, in which there is room for private financing, crowdfunding, sponsorization, and distribution presales. Even though the new three-staged model (in which the first stage would be the first year of the project) keeps crowdfunding and private investment as funding means, their role in the project varies: economically, crowdfunding carries less weight than in the first draft of the project. Nevertheless, its use is kept due to the weight such a completely developed infrastructure has in keeping and strengthening a fan community. Regarding private investment, it keeps the same operational system, but the owned profits per invested money ratio vary depending on the project stage. According to Riot Cinema data, of the €860,000 the project will cost, it is expected that 6.5% be financed through crowdfunding and/or merchandising, 21% by private investment, 32% through sponsorship, and 40.5% through presales distribution (approximate figures).[citation needed]
Yuri's Night
One of the examples of the application of the new sponsorship option was available in the party carried out during the 2010 Yuri's Night. Since Yuri Gagarin is a kind of mascot of the project, the people in charge of the film worked in collaboration with LEEM for months in order to join the world initiatives celebrated in Yuri's Night. It also happened to celebrate the achievement of 2000 producers of the film.[citation needed]
Distribution and transmedia
In the same way, the movie distribution model has also changed. The project has suffered more noticeable changes in its distribution channels and in the final completion of the project. Regarding distribution, the new plan's objective is the simultaneous premiere in all release windows. The philosophy behind this decision is to allow the user to choose the format he wants to watch the movie. Different particularities have been adopted for each release window, taking each mean into account, but making some changes in the traditional way of distribution. For instance, the release on the Internet will still be totally free and in HD, while the TV release will have an alternative ending for that channel. In the same way, the people in charge of the movie have designed a special presentation in cinemas to encourage people to go the theaters. This is called “The Cosmonaut Experience”, and it merges performance elements with recreational interaction with the audience, classic screening and a traveling tour, in order to provide the audience, according to the creators, with an added "experience". This tour of screenings will not replace the traditional screening in cinemas, but it will be done at the same time.[citation needed]
The Cosmonaut, regarding its current completion, is no longer a science fiction feature film. Following the steps of franchises such as The Matrix or Lost, The Cosmonaut will be a transmedia project with ramifications in different fields. It is planned to make a series of webisodes, mobile content, or even an ARG, among others. Each series of content will show its own perspective of a story included in the film. It won't be necessary to watch them in order to understand the given facts, but it will provide some data and information about The Cosmonaut world that will complement each other.[citation needed]
2011
An update of the business model ("The Plan 2") was presented in October 2011, once shooting was finished.[citation needed]
The Cosmonaut is one of the most successful crowdfunding projects in history with about €300,000.[citation needed]
Save The Cosmonaut
After having raised €120,000 during the first two years, the decision was taken to shoot with that money together with €120,000 more contributed by a Russian co-producer. One week before shooting, when all the tickets were purchased and all the reservations made, the co-producer had to withdraw. A desperate campaign was then launched requesting the community to help save the movie.[citation needed]
More than 600 people contributed a total of €131,000 in 3 days, beating all the world crowdfunding records in such a short period of time[citation needed], and allowing the film to be shot. With such a huge success, the possibility of investing was kept during the entirety of shooting. A streaming window was created so the investors could watch the shooting they had made possible live.[citation needed]
Lánzanos, the Spanish crowdfunding platform that collaborated during the whole campaign, faced, together with The Cosmonaut's team, what they called "their most beautiful failure of design": the raising status bar exceeded 173%, going beyond the box it was embedded in. The same happened on the film website.
Media coverage and reception
After over a year of promotion, the project received certain degree of attention from the national media in Spain. There were reports about the film in various television channels of the country: TVE, in the news program of LaSexta,[3] CNN+ and Cuatro,[4] and in a divulgative program of La 2.[5] [20]; as well as in different newspapers, magazines and radios: El País, El Mundo, ABC, Público, AND, La Gaceta, Fotogramas, Cadena Ser, los 40 Principales. We can also find among these the Spanish edition of Cahiers du Cinéma. The main coverage of the project, however, came through the Internet. A great quantity of blogs and web based media dedicated articles to the film, between them some of the most influential blogs of Spain. Some examples of this include the digital version of El País,[6] the daily newspaper with the biggest print run in the country, or Microsiervos,[7] one of the most visited blogs in Spanish. The media reaction wasn't limited to Spain: some English-speaking blogs wrote about the project as well.[8]
CosmoNauts concert
Most of the media attention towards the project was generated after a two-day music festival. The festival, named "CosmoNauts", was announced in The Cosmonaut blog on 9 June 2009.[9] It was organized as a mass event to promote the film; during two days (29 and 30 June), nine bands belonging to the indie scene of Madrid played in front of an audience that, according to the organization, reached 400 people between the two days, with the emerging filmmaker Nacho Vigalondo as the master of ceremonies. The concert, held in Madrid in the Sala Heineken,[10] wasn't able to fill the seating capacity of the concert hall, mainly due to schedule hardships (the concert was held in the middle of a working week, and at the end of the month), and the organization's inexperience. While it was a mild economic failure, the organizers of the concert ascribe the subsequent promotional success of the movie and the later peak of sales in the online store to the festival, and, therefore, consider it a success.[11]
Travelling at zero gravity
The Cosmonaut team, in collaboration with Improba Spain (the collective of followers of Improv Everywhere in Spain), carried out a promotional flashmob on 29 January 2010, in Puerta del Sol, Madrid. The object of the event was to simulate a Moon landing in downtown Madrid, and it had a remarkable attendance, even some of the passers-by joined the performance.
Controversy
The crowdfunding movie project The Cosmonaut has suffered a serious PR drawback[12][13] due to a public relationship problem related to the director and writer, Nicolás Alcalá. In his response (which he made public) to a resume from a man named "Carlos", Alcalá made some very peculiar remarks about the structure of the email and its purpose. Thus, with the intention of humiliating this man, he made comments, such as: "If you are a fishmonger, tell us, we have a job for you." (It can be read in Spanish here.[14]) Spanish social media responded very harshly to the public comment, with multiple reactions across the web,[15][16][17][18][19] and thousands of angry responses on their blogs, leading to a public declaration from the director[20] where he made a public apology for his comments.
See also
References
- ^ "The Cosmonaut" (PDF). S268192873.mialojamiento.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 June 2013. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ Riot Cinema (14 May 2009). "The Cosmonaut in 5 steps on Vimeo". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "LASEXTA NOTICIAS. LISTA FALCIANI. Última hora, política, economía, sociedad, internacional, deportes, cultura, solidaridad, vídeos - ATRESMEDIA". Lasextanoticias.com. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Noticias En". Cuatro.com. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Cámara abierta 2.0 - El cosmonauta, un largometraje Creative Commons, Cámara abierta 2.0" (in Spanish). Rtve.es. 22 July 2009. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ Méndez, Manuel Ángel (30 July 2009). "Productor de películas desde dos euros | Edición impresa | EL PAÍS". El País. Elpais.com. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "El Cosmonauta | Microsiervos (Películas / TV)". Microsiervos. 19 May 2009. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Has THE COSMONAUT Discovered The Future Of Film Making?". TwitchFilm. 28 May 2009. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ [1] Archived 25 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [2] Archived 5 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ [3] Archived 15 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Humillado públicamente por una empresa tras enviar su currículum - Yahoo! Finanzas". Es.finance.yahoo.com. 19 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Humillado pĂşblicamente por una empresa tras enviar su currĂculum". Huffingtonpost.es. 20 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Share photos and videos on Twitter". Twitpic. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "De productores 'cools de El Cosmonauta a tiranos que humillan a jóvenes que buscan trabajo | Con noticias de Facebook". Blogs.lainformacion.com. 21 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Humillado públicamente por una empresa tras enviar su currículum". ForoCoches. 19 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Sitio suspendido". Theartiststools.com. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
- ^ "Riot Cinema Collective publicly humiliates a guy to send his curriculum vitae - The show must go on". Dotsonthei.blogspot.com.es. 21 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "Humillado públicamente por una empresa tras enviar su currículum". Meneame.net. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ "EDITADO. Disculpa Pública (Cosas que no debes hacer si buscas trabajo en Riot Cinema) - Cinema On Fire". Blog.riotcinema.com. 17 September 2012. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
Further reading
- "The Creative Crowd's Greatest Hits". Wired. April 2010