{"id":9707,"date":"2010-11-08T04:50:09","date_gmt":"2010-11-08T04:50:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=9707"},"modified":"2010-11-08T04:50:09","modified_gmt":"2010-11-08T04:50:09","slug":"my-strange-catfish-experience","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2010\/11\/08\/my-strange-catfish-experience\/","title":{"rendered":"My Strange Catfish Experience"},"content":{"rendered":"
It was at a few days before the end of the London Film Festival when I had my first strange Catfish<\/a><\/strong> experience.<\/p>\n I was sitting in the delegate centre on the South Bank, the place where journalists and filmmakers go to hang out, drink coffee and wonder why the Wi-Fi still isn\u2019t working.<\/p>\n After seeing Black Swan<\/a> that morning I wanted somewhere to write down my initial thoughts on what was one of the most anticipated films of the festival.<\/p>\n After an hour or so I bumped into someone I knew from a UK distributor, who was accompanied by two American filmmakers who were screening a film at the festival called Catfish.<\/p>\n They were Henry Joost<\/a>, one of the directors, and Yaniv Schulman<\/a>, the photographer on whose experiences the film is based.<\/p>\n But what exactly is Catfish?<\/p>\n I knew it was a documentary that had screened to great buzz<\/a> and acclaim at the Sundance Film Festival<\/a> back in January.<\/p>\n But I\u2019d also heard several people say that you should know as little as possible before seeing it.<\/p>\n Henry confirmed that this was probably for the best. All I knew about the film was that it was a documentary (or was it<\/a>?) which involved Facebook at some point.<\/p>\n Unlike other films at the London Film Festival, there hadn\u2019t been any official press screenings, so I\u2019d bought a ticket for a screening the following Monday.<\/p>\n But I was now in the bizarre situation of chatting with the co-director of a film but not wanting to know too much about it.<\/p>\n So, whilst avoiding major plot spoilers, Henry told me how they had shot it on very cheap, consumer digital cameras and even took one out of his pocket to show me. It was indeed the kind of everyday camera you see tourists use in London all the time.<\/p>\n When I asked about how they got the film to Sundance, he explained that someone sent the film on DVD to Andrew Jarecki<\/a> (the director of Capturing the Friedmans) and that helped things move along.<\/p>\n He spoke of his excitement when it first screened at the festival, after which it immediately became one of the most sought after titles, with the likes of Brett Ratner and J.J. Abrams entering into to a bidding war to acquire the film.<\/p>\n I spoke carefully because I knew there was a lot of chatter back in January about the nature of the film, but I refrained from asking details so as not to spoil my first viewing.<\/p>\n But we chatted about the technical aspects of submitting a film to Sundance, The Social Network<\/a> (another film involving Facebook) and Black Swan, which apparently used the same post-production facilities as Catfish.<\/p>\n There is another strange connection with Darren Aronofsky\u2019s film, as the guys behind Catfish also made a film about the New York Ballet<\/a>, albeit a very different one.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n