Posts Tagged ‘daazo’

Filmmakers from South-Eastern Europe Join Forces

Monday, July 18th, 2011

Sarajevo City of Film Collection on Daazo.com

In the age of co-production based European cinema, Sarajevo City of Film is one of the most inspiring and useful initiative for young talents. In cooperation with the project Daazo.com is delighted to present an online selection of Sarajevo City of Film.

Sarajevo City of Film is a project for the realization of short micro-budget films, created through artistic and technical cooperation between young filmmakers from South-Eastern Europe.

All screened authors are entrants of the last two editions of the Sarajevo Talent Campus, whose work represents the future of regional cinematography. The shootings took place in Sarajevo, the city known as being crossroads of different cultures and religions, and a symbolic film centre of the region. From 2008, each year four to five shorts were filmed, and premiered at the Sarajevo Film Festival. In this online collection you can watch the most inspiring works made in the Sarajevo City of Film framework.

Alena’s Journey was one of the first ones realised in the SCF project. The story by Károly Ujj Mészáros is about Alena, an inhibited, thirty-year old accountant from Sarajevo who has a plane to catch, but everything seems to work against her. Meanness at the workplace and the cruel secrets of the Balkan war come to the surface while in the meantime Alena bravely struggles to achieve her goal.

Waiting by Dániel Béres is an innovative artistic reconstruction of the zombie film genre. It’s about a girl who – while taking a walk through the centre – discovers something very strange about the people of Sarajevo. They seem like lifeless ’zombies’, they only come alive for a few seconds to perform a little scene written down for them. She takes it as a joke first and fools around until she comes across someone with a paper: „Kill her!” written on it.

Pink River by Zacharias Mavroeidis is a daring piece on the gay issue. The story focuses on Mari, who after living in London for 10 years, returns to Sarajevo to sell a house she inheritated. While in town, she meets and catches up with Asja, her ex girlfriend. The two women and their opposing lifestyle choices will soon come in conflict.

Check out the projects and spot the next generation of regional filmmakers at www.daazo.com/scf!

The new Daazo Facebook player

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Good news for those who are using Facebook that from now on Daazo has an integrated filmplayer. So any time you share a Daazo film on your Facebook wall, it will appear in an instant player. No more extra clicks, just enjoy the film!
Try it out!

New Uploading System on Daazo

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

We just launched our new uploading system yesterday.  Based on your feedbacks, it was really time to refresh the uploading procedure on Daazo. It seemed that it had too many steps and somehow it wasn’t always clear what and how to do. But now everything has changed! Easy uploading in one step, simple communication,  clear overview on the process. So the only thing lasts is you trying it out!

Daazo Team

Hungarian Palme d’Or Winners

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

canneslogokicsiAt Daazo.com, we seriously believe that digging out masterpieces from the past is just as important as finding new artworks. As our site is based in Hungary, we’ve looked into that past and selected all the short films of Hungarian film’s history to have won the revered Palme d’Or (Golden Palm) at Cannes International Film Festival. We now proudly present these films, with the hope that by making this collection available on-line we can fill a gap in Hungarian cultural heritage.

Even the most enthusiastic of Hungarian film lovers can be quite surprised to discover that there are five Golden Palm winning Hungarian shorts – with very few of them being able to name the films themselves. The aim of this special selection is to maneuver these hidden masterpieces into the spotlight.

János Vadász was the first winner of the award, with his experimental film, Overture, in 1965. This wonderfully photographed documentary tells a very natural and elementary story: the birth of a bird. However, the work is far from simple documentary, as Vadász used the camera in a particularly intimate way, in harmony with the music of Beethoven. Overture was also nominated for the Academy Award for the best short film in 1965.

Hungarian animation has always been in the forefront of the animation world – both technically and culturally. We’ve already presented Ferenc Rofusz’s Academy Award winning short, The Fly, and now have other masterpieces to show.

In the late 70’s, a new generation of animators began their careers – among them, Marcell Jankovics. The first recognition from the international film scene came in 1977, when Jankovics won the Palme d’Or with his exeptional film, Fight. There are but very few artworks from film history which are able to describe an abstract problem like the history of art, or the relationship between an artist and his artwork. Marcell Jankovics used very simple visual effects to draw, literally, a fight between a statue and a sculptor – the result being quite similar to the famous graphic work, Drawing Hands, by M. C. Escher.

Jankovics’ award can be seen as having launched the golden era of Hungarian animation. Ferenc Rofusz later won an Oscar in 1981, and Béla Vajda received the Palme d’Ore for his animation, Moto perpetuo – which takes usual situations from daily life in Hungary in the 80’s as its subject matter. This film is very different in style to Fight, however, the critical approach of both is quite similar. In 1981, it was a very brave work indeed, realized with perfect technical features. Today, it’s amazing to see that neither the topic nor the technique seems any less relevant. Though the political system may have changed, and there are gorgeous 3D animations being made with computers, Moto perpetuo remains very true and utterly enjoyable.

Marcell Iványi’s film, Wind, is definitely one of the classics of European short film culture: inspired by the Lucien Hervé photograph Three Women. Wind’s unique “one-take” technique stems back to the Hungarian Cinematographic style of the 70’s, which is probably one of the most well-known ages of this country’s cinema. However, the director managed to create his own atmosphere, in which the slow rhythm and strict camera movements of the film perfectly describe our human nature in inhuman times. Wind won the Palme d’Or in 1996.

The last film in the list so far is After Rain, which won the Palme d’Or in 2002. This four-minute-long work is clear proof that a short film can handle a serious topic in an effective way, with impact, whilst retaining a distance from its actual subject. The bicycle ride of Kati is probably one of the most powerful scenes ever to have featured in a short film.

Two days’ left for Food Project

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Application for Nisi Masa’s Food Project is closing soon. More information for last minute film makers can be found on www.matteroftaste.eu ! Upload your food related film to Daazo and take part of Lago Film Festival

Daazo: Being Refreshed

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Little more than two years – it’s a long time, especially in the field of www. After setting up Daazo in 2007 we got many nice feedbacks considering the design and funcionality of the website. Film makers and film lovers have started to use the page, which was our aim – and luckily they use it today as well

However, we can sense the breezes of new times, so we made a smart facelift of Daazo. So please find these novelties on the site:

New player:

Now you can enjoy a proper widescreen player – finally – with a proper full screen mode.

There’s a chance for you to skin the player you want embedding to your blog or website. This time we also took care putting the most important infos, features into the player. So you can find the content, name of director or the categories – among other things, like community features (share, vote, embed). The HD option is coming soon!

New structure:

We had to create more space for you and for the film itself. Since we are out-of-the-box guys, we dropped out the useless boxes and frames, hence now you can navigate yourself easier with the help of bigger pictures to get quickly to enjoy the films.

We would like to provide as many infos from the world of short films, so from now on you can find the titles and introductions of the magazine articles on the main page, next to the films.

Enjoy the refreshed Daazo. And stay tuned, we don’t forget to load extra quality content into these wonderful players!

Daazo produced its first short film

Monday, October 20th, 2008

tourSince a while we are thinking about how nice it would be to produce a short fiction films. Now we are proudly inform you that we produced our first short film, directed by Balázs Simonyi. Daazo works as a co-producer in the project since the script is co-written by Zoltán Aprily, one of the founders of the site. Of course, Daazo sponsored the film financial wise too.  A workshop (Celluloid Workshop) being held every year in Hungary set the technical and equipmental framework for the production. The shooting took place in Miskolc and Emőd in Hungary.

The 12 mins long comedy film “Tour” is a tale about a man who dared to dream, a tale about a surveyor and hobby-cyclist, who believes that one day he will be able to ride 183 kilometer, just as pro’s do at Tour de France.

Well, the film is in the box and ready to start its festival circle and we hope it will earn many awards.

We will let you see a short preview from the film soon. Stay tuned!

Startup Conference in Budapest

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

As the Hungarian based Daazo is getting to be as a well known startup project in Budapest, we were invited to present Daazo to the audience of IT professionals. The idea of the this conference was to create a platform where all the fresh and ambitious projects of Hungary can get to know each others. Basic panels covered topics like “how to get financial support” ” how to advertise” etc.

Even tough it was a so called “underground” meeting – most of the people having new ideas without major financial supporter – participating this conference was really a challenge for us, because neither Daniel nor Me are coming from the IT sector. Both of us are rather filmmakers, than computer experts, so to introduce our site in a way that is interesting in front these professionals was not an easy task.

Startup conf Daazo

After all it went very well, we got many feedback immediately and it seems that Daazo managed to hit the challenge again and surprise everybody how great the site is.