Monaco Streaming Film Festival prepares for powerful return

After launching during Covid, the Monaco Streaming Film Festival is back even stronger this Spring, with a heavy focus on powerful women and a goal of advancing the video-on-demand industry. Here is what we know so far.

After five years contemplating the idea of developing a streaming event in Monaco, Tony Davis gathered a team together and put the wheels in motion for the world’s first video-on-demand festival, the Monaco Streaming Film Festival, in 2021.

“There was no festival or event specifically focussed on viewing-on-demand, or streaming, and there was, in fact, a level of hostility towards streaming platforms from the film and theatrically-oriented industries,” Tony Davis tells Monaco Life.  “So, we decided to create a platform for the industry to understand itself better, to communicate more easily, to network, and identify relationships and opportunities.”

Despite all the drawbacks of hosting an inaugural festival in the middle of a global pandemic, including last-minute cancellations and health restrictions, the Monaco Streaming Film Festival (MSFF) last year made headlines across the world and attracted some big names in the field.

Meanwhile, the Covid-19 pandemic accelerated the demand and subscriber growth in streaming video services massively. Disney+, for example, launched in November 2019 and reached its goal of 60 million subscribers globally by 2024 four years ahead of schedule.

But, the video-on-demand industry is still very much in its infancy.

So, over the course of four days, from 31st May to 3rd June at the Grimaldi Forum, the Monaco Streaming Film Festival (MSFF) will bring together industry professionals, content creators, investors, and the general public for a series of film premiers, conferences, cocktail and networking events, Q&As, screenings, and a gala.

It is a jam-packed schedule that will see the showcasing of 100 films in just three days, including 80 shorts and 20 features.

Monaco Life can reveal that among the highlights is the premier screening of a film produced by Sean Hepburn Ferrer, Audrey Hepburn’s son.

The festival will also welcome keynote speaker Cherie Blair, wife of former UK prime minister Tony Blair, who is a renowned barrister and advocate for equal rights and female empowerment. She recently made her first foray into film-making, serving as executive producer on the drama The Rock Pile. The film tells the story of Time magazine correspondent Bob Hastings who, while on assignment in Jerusalem, uncovers a story of three young boys of different faiths who are brought together through football.

“There is going to be a very strong theme of powerful female leaders,” says Davis, adding that the festival is representative of a contemporary industry. “The Streaming Festival is a modern festival. We don’t pay attention to the history of film, we are about the video-on-demand and streaming industry, and it is very important to us that we are a completely inclusive event, that we are open to all people, be they a film maker like James Cameron (Terminator, Aliens, The Abyss etc.), recently out of film school, or not from film school at all… there is a place for them to come along to the festival, to enjoy and learn.”

Unlike the highly exclusive Cannes Film Festival, which ends just two days prior, the MSFF encourages the public to attend conferences, and watch film premiers and screenings. Organisers are even going so far as to offer free popcorn and coffee as a special treat.

Meanwhile, on International Parent’s Day, Wednesday 1st June, the festival is teaming up with local group Entreparents to offer free back-to-back screenings of children’s films. Stay tuned for some big-name announcements here soon.

For industry professionals, or those wishing to enter the industry, the festival will host film and production distribution organisations from all over the world, providing a platform for the guidance and support of producers and distributors as they navigate their way in this new frontier.

Finance through NFTs is also a hot topic.

The Streaming Film Festival 2022

The event will culminate in the Monaco Streaming Film Festival Awards on Friday 3rd June, during which 12 individuals and organisations will be rewarded for their successes at a black-tie event.

Last year’s winners include ‘Lord of the Danse’ star Michael Flatley for Best Actor in his film Blackbird, ‘Seduced: Inside the NXIVM Cult’ for Best Documentary Series, and Jon Favreau, creator of the Star Wars Disney+ original series The Mandalorian, for the Reg Grundy Innovation Award.

“We decided that the award would recognise innovation because Reg Grundy changed television,” says Jo Cullen-Cronshaw, CEO of RG Capital and Director of the MSFF.

Reg Grundy is best known for the Australian television productions Prisoner, Neighbours and Sons and Daughters, as well as game shows Match Game and Wheel of Fortune.

“He wasn’t just a creator of programming, he created formatting. Copyrighting only existed in books etc. at the time, not in television, so how it all works today is down to Reg Grundy.”

The MSFF Reg Grundy Innovation Award is “specifically for game changers”, says Cullen-Cronshaw, “somebody who has changed the direction of film in all its genres. We admit, Jon Favreau will be a big name to follow.”

There have been 3,000 films submitted from around 112 countries for this award alone.

RG Capital is the main backer of the Monaco Streaming Film Festival, coming on board during a challenging inauguration. But an exciting line-up for 2022 has organisers confident that the event will attract more corporate sponsorship going forward.

They also expect to significantly grow on last year’s figure of over 100,000 people in virtual participation, 80% of which was in the US alone.

“The conferences will go out live again, so anyone in the world can tune in and participate,” says Davis. “This year, we are also packaging the films and series that we are screening for a number of global streaming platforms to share with their audiences. It will give producers an opportunity to be seen by a massive global audience to not only enjoy their work, but who may also help them develop and trigger their careers.”

The digital platform

While the MSFF will end after three and a half days, its mandate will continue through a new digital platform that will provide anyone around the world with ongoing access and networking opportunities in the world of streaming.

“The Grundy Creator Platform, which will go live the day the Monaco Streaming Festival ends, can be used for a number of reasons – to search for project financing, to seek distribution, to learn more from key industry professionals,” reveals Davis. “It is a financing, distributing and learning tool that they can come into anytime they wish.”

It will also be a platform on which people can upload their creations, a bit like the Tinder of streaming.

“People can place their projects on the platform and potential financiers will use our algorithms to identify the type of project they want to invest in,” explains Davis. “They can then look in to it further and interact with the producers, and hopefully get involved by funding the production of the project.”

Monaco Life is proud to be a media sponsor of the MSFF. Tickets are now available online at http://www.mcsff.com.

 

 

 

 

Photos source: MSFF 

 

 

 

Christina Aguilera added to Summer Festival line-up

American pop diva Christina Aguilera and Lebanese singer, dancer and actress Myriam Fares have both been added to the line-up of the Monte-Carlo Summer Festival, joining the likes of James Blunt, Alicia Keys and Rita Ora for the star-studded month-long event.

The Monte-Carlo Summer Festival, hosted each year by the Société des Bains de Mer (SBM) is so much more than a concert series. It has become a summer institution and a draw for some of the biggest names in the music world.

Held at various locations around the Principality, including Le Sporting, the Opera Garnier and, most recently, Casino Square, the 2022 Summer Festival marks a return to normalcy after the pandemic years, which limited the acts who were able to come and play.

The roster of names reads like a Who’s Who in the music world, with the superstars of today mingling with old favourites, and the recent announcement of Christina Aguilera and Myriam Fares joining the line-up just adds to the glamour.

Christina Aguilera first hit the scene as an 18-year-old ingenue and had three number-one hits from her debut album back in 1998. Her hit-making streak continued for decades, and she expanded her career from the music industry to include stints as a coach on reality show The Voice, an actress on the drama series Nashville, and as an on-stage act in Las Vegas’s Planet Hollywood.

She is coming to the Salle des Etoiles on 29th July for an 8pm dinner show that is sure to get crowds up on their feet and dance the night away.

Also added is Lebanese star Myriam Fares. First hitting the scene in 2003 with her debut album Myriam, she fast became famous for her provocative costumes and stage style, often being compared to Shakira for her boldness.

Myriam Fares is coming to join the Oriental Night line-up on 11th August taking place at the Salle des Etoiles with doors opening at 8pm.

For tickets and more info, visit the event website at https://www.montecarlosbm.com/en/shows/monte-carlo-summer-festival

 

 

 

 

ASM preview: “I want my players to be 200% motivated”

AS Monaco manager Philippe Clement has previously described every match of the run-in as a final. The Belgian spoke to the press on Friday, before the latest one against an in-form Troyes side.

Unbeaten in their last five matches, Troyes will arrive at the Stade Louis II high on confidence, and Clement isn’t underestimating the threat that they pose. “I don’t want my players to underestimate the opponent. Troyes are currently in their best period of the season, and I’m surprised they aren’t higher in the table because they have technical qualities.”

Monaco are enjoying a purple patch themselves, and it will be important to carry that through into this match in order to catch up with European rivals Rennes and Nice, both of whom they will face in the coming weeks.

“I want my players to be 200% motivated,” said Clement. “It is a message I have passed on since I arrived here. I saw that mentality against Metz and I want to see it again on Sunday.”

One player who has been sidelined for the last couple of matches, but has shown positive signs in training this week is Sofiane Diop. A mainstay of the side until the match against PSG, he has not featured in back-to-back fixtures for the first time all season.

“I have seen him frustrated from time to time, but not the last couple of days. The last two training sessions I saw once again the Sofiane from January and February. We need that.” He then told Monaco Life, “I have seen a good reaction from him.”

Should Diop be back to his scintillating best, it would provide an extra impetus for an improving Monaco side. The news isn’t all positive however. Monaco Life attended training in La Turbie on Friday and can report that Guillermo Maripan and Radoslaw Majecki were absent.

On Maripan, Clement said, “He won’t be available. He still has a bit of pain in his knee, and has had injections to help him recover quicker. He won’t be available on Sunday, but hopefully he will be in the following weeks.”

Meanwhile, Cesc Fabregas remains on his journey back to full fitness, and the possibility of some game time for the National 2 (N2) side hasn’t been ruled out. Clement also confirmed that Maghnes Akliouche, Jean Marcelin and Yllan Okou would feature for the N2 side on Saturday.

Although Kevin Volland will be available for selection (albeit not for the full 90 minutes), Clement revealed the extent of the German’s injury issues. “Volland has had an issue with his ankle since the beginning of the season. He had an injection, and didn’t train the first week of the international break, then he was ill. He feels better now, but he has lost time.”

For now, the returns of Benoit Badiashile, Aleksandr Golovin and Myron Boadu have compensated for the losses of Maripan and Volland, but Clement will undoubtedly want a full squad to choose from as he navigates a tough run-in with a European place to chase.

 

Photo by Luke Entwistle