Tag: Love Between the Covers

  • Documentary release: Love Between the Covers

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    LBTC-PRERelease

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    I’ve been wanting to see this documentary since I heard it was being filmed three years ago!  Last year, I attempted to see it twice and missed the showings.  Needless to say, when I saw this promotional opportunity, I jumped on it!  I had the pleasure of watching this film a few days ago and I thoroughly enjoyed it!  If you’re a romance reader or a reader of any sort, I think you’ll find this documentary absolutely fascinating, I know I did. I think if you’re not a romance reader, this film would extremely eye-opening because I don’t think the average reader realizes how much romance pays the publishing house bills!  Snobby readers are so quick to poo poo romance and they don’t realize that romance tends to keep the publishing house lights on. 😉  It was so interesting to me to listen to authors talk about their path to becoming a writer and how it has changed their lives.  Being a part of the publishing ecosystem as a blogger and publicist, I identified with so much of the larger concept of how powerful we can be as women and our ability to take the bull by the horns (in my case, my love of books and reading) and turn it into something that helps to put food on the table while, being involved in something that I truly love.

    I really cannot recommend this film enough.  Buy it or rent it on the 12th!!!

     

    Love Between the Covers – Official Trailer from Laurie Kahn on Vimeo.

    More snippets:

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    Q&A with Laurie Kahn, writer, producer and director

     Please give us your description of the film playing.

    While romance novels and their signature covers are ubiquitous around the world, the global community of millions of women who read, write, and love them remains oddly invisible. Love Between the Covers is the fascinating story of five very different authors who invite us into a vast female community that’s running a billion dollar industry on the cusp of an irreversible power shift. In Love Between the Covers, we enter one of the few places where female characters are always center stage, where justice prevails in every book, where women win what they want, and the broad spectrum of desires of women from all backgrounds are not feared, but explored unapologetically.

    What drew you to this story?

    I want to bring the lives and work of compelling women to the screen, because any industry dominated by women is typically dismissed as trivial and “merely domestic.”  My previous films — A Midwife’s Tale and Tupperware! – are very different from one another, but they were both shaped by my desire to look honestly at communities of women who haven’t been taken seriously (but should be), who deserve to be heard without being mocked.

    What was the biggest challenge in making the film?

    Two things really.  Raising the money (isn’t that always the case?).  And figuring out how to structure the film.  Love Between the Covers is more than the story of five characters; it is the story of an unrecognized global community. Structuring this film was even harder than structuring a film with five characters (which is a difficult task in and of itself!).  We finally found a solution in the editing room.

    What do you want people to think about when they are leaving the theatre?

    I want people to realize how deeply ingrained we all are in dismissing anything that is by women, for women and about women. Many romance readers told me stories of complete strangers looking over their shoulders on a train, or at the beach, leaning over and asking them, “Why do you read that trash?” I really don’t think that would happen to someone reading a mystery or a thriller! Romance novels are dismissed as simplistic. People who’ve never read a romance novel tell me, “They are formulaic. They all end happily.” But all genre fiction ends with a happy ending. Mysteries all begin with a crime and end with the case solved — a guaranteed happy ending. Arnold Schwarzenegger is never killed in his movies. The good guys always win. So why are romances singled out? I think it has to do with a devaluation of women’s work and a deep-seated fear of women’s desires.

    What’s the biggest misconception about you and your work?

    People tend to dismiss my ideas as fluffy.  When they see the finished films, they realize the topics are not fluffy

     

    How did you get your film funded? (Is it a studio film, a crowdsourced film, somewhere in between?) Share some insights into how you got the film made.

    I started out with development funding from Mass Humanities, the Romance Writers of America, and the Nora Roberts Foundation.  I then raised more than my $50K goal in a Kickstarter campaign (I raised $58K).  That allowed me to start shooting.  Most of my production funding came from the National Endowment for the Humanities.  And several foundations and dozens of individuals came through for me at the end when I needed to pay for music rights, do our sound mix and color correction.

    Believe it or not, Love Between the Covers and the larger Popular Romance Project it’s part of have been attacked in the US Congress. Senator Coburn railed about the project in the US Senate, insisting it was silly and trivial.  And Rep. Salmon introduced a bill in the US House of Representatives (H.R. 5155 – see attached), to kill this project!  Fortunately, the bill didn’t pass!

     

    **Originally from: Indiewire – Women & Hollywood – Interview by Laura Berger http://blogs.indiewire.com/womenandhollywood/hot-docs-2015-women-directors-meet-laurie-kahn-love-between-the-covers-20150424

     

     

     

     

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