NEWS
ALI BROWN Q&A: “WE LOOK FOR TALENT WHOSE PERSPECTIVE IS UNIQUE TO THEM”

In the second half of our interview with Ali Brown, we find out what PRETTYBIRD looks for when hiring new directors.

 

Brown is joining ADFEST 2019 as Jury President, Film Craft Lotus and New Director Lotus. She is Partner and Executive Producer at PRETTYBIRD in Los Angeles – a cutting-edge company that was named Creativity magazine's Top Production Company of the Year in 2015.

 

You are overseeing ADFEST’s Fabulous Five mentoring program next year for emerging directors. Why are programs like this important?

Mentorship is critical to the evolution and relevance of this industry. We cannot expect someone to be the most talented filmmaker we’ve ever met and also understand the nuances of the business. How to make sure they write incredible treatments, are charming and engaging on conference calls, know how to diplomatically get their vision across while incorporating that of the agency and client?

 

These are delicate dances to master and to expect someone to be the most incredible filmmaker and perfectly run their first set is unrealistic.

 

For us, we look for talent whose perspective is unique to them – who has some signature in their work that makes it identifiable to them and only them. How they see the world, tell a story, cast their talent, move the camera. It can be so many things but ultimately you want to be able to look at a body of work of a filmmaker and see them in it. This is something we can’t teach or mentor. You just have to have it. But if you do, we can teach you the rest ;)

 

You were working in the commercial and music video industry before moving over to feature films. What did you learn over this period?

I learned so much it’s hard to boil it down. But I had the privilege of working with Forest Whitaker who was truly a Renaissance man – actor, producer, director. I had a front row seat to so many facets of filmmaking: finding stories, developing them, bringing them to life, and making sure they were heard. I honed my skills as a writer and creative mind, while also becoming much more savvy about the business, not just the “show."

 

Having an eye into the studio system and the independent film world, seeing everything involved in both worlds and the true balance of art and commerce – it was an incredible learning experience.

 

Why did you return to commercial filmmaking?

Ultimately in features you can end up developing projects that never come to life or working on some that do, but that you fall out of love with. That can happen in commercials too of course, but the lifespan is weeks versus years, so you quickly move into action and fall back in love. I returned to commercials due to an event in my personal life, but I see how my brain missed the challenge of the pace and ever changing needs of commercials. I could bring the passion, intensity, and focus I gained from my work in features and apply that into the wide variety of projects, people and challenges that advertising presents at its lightning pace.

 

And with PRETTYBIRD specifically, I saw the opportunity to not be limited to one genre or another, but to be a part of building a company that looked at producing holistically - creative and logistical, agnostic to the distribution outlet. I was fortunate to be given a long runway to try to build a company that wants and can do everything.

 

You have fought to increase diversity within the film industry through projects like Women in Film and Manifest Works. How did you get involved?

That could be an article in and of itself!  This business is full of barriers based on gender, color, socio-economic status, and access.  It is an industry built largely with nepotism at its roots – it was a “family biz”, in a sense.  And it was exclusive – so there weren’t that many jobs or ways in without a particular last name, a connection, or bank account.  And it was lucrative, so people weren’t really trying to share that wealth. 

 

Thankfully that is changing now. There are incredible organizations that are encouraging diversity in all aspects of this business and they are starting with the notion of community. Creating communities that are supportive and give meaningful mentorship is critical to creating a pipeline of talent – whether above or below the line – that can not only diversify the voices being heard but make real lasting change. These organizations are about not only creating opportunity, but making sure that when the opportunity comes, someone has the skillset to make the most of it. I think it’s important that those go hand in hand.

 

Manifest Works in particular is an organization that is truly giving an opportunity to those who were never given a first chance in life. I have been lucky to find a career in this business thanks to someone taking a chance on me. It is my obligation to pay that forward to someone else.

 

prettybird.co


30 October, 2018