Conventionally Speaking: A much-anticipated battle of the century failed to make much of an impression on Austin webmaster
Harry Knowles of
www.aint-it-cool-news.com. Two weekends ago Knowles was holding forth at the massive
Comic Con International: San Diego on several panels, the most notable of which was "Caught in the Net: Movie Webmasters on Hollywood, the Internet, and the Future of Their Bastard Child," which also featured
Chris Gore and
Ron Wells of
Film Threat, as well as
Patrick Sauriol of the online film site
Dark Horizons,
Dave Poland of
Roughcut.com,
Nick Nunziata of
Chud.com,
X-Men producer
Tom DeSanto, and indie auteur
Kevin Smith. All of this would've attracted a lot less attention if it weren't for the ongoing accusations aimed at Knowles by the
Film Threat/Dark Horizons camps, who have taken him to task for "unprofessional conduct" and possibly receiving preferential treatment from the studios. The extended feud has already been covered in detail (and can be accessed) at both the
Ain't It Cool News site and on
www.filmthreat.com and
www.darkhorizons.com, but according to Knowles, the panel was about as riveting as a tube sock. "It went fine, really," says Knowles. "
Film Threat and Ron Wells tried to be asses, and then Kevin Smith told Ron Wells that he was disgusting, and then Wells never said another word through the whole panel. Chris Gore sat there making goofy faces while other people talked. It was fairly pathetic, actually. Absolutely the most boring panel I've ever been on. Of the three panels I did, it was the least attended. There were no fireworks at all." Media biz site
Inside.com had a different take on the event of the day, judiciously employing the words "attacked," "verbal brawl," and "bickering" in their related story (
www.inside.com/ story/Story_Cached/0,2770,7192_10,00.html), but Knowles insists it was all much ado about nada. Nonmaterializing internecine Web warfare aside, Knowles spent much of his time signing autographs ("2,500 to 3,000") and trying to work the dealers' room while being barraged by fans. Somebody get that wrist a cold compress!... Meanwhile, back in River City, local femme film group
Reel Women has slated their second annual Film Forum --
Reel Women Presents Reel Stories -- for Aug. 11-13 at the Millennium Youth Entertainment Complex (1165 Hargrave). The forum/fest will feature screenings of femme-related filmmaking (
Katya Bankowski's
Shadow Boxers doc, which screened at SXSW, among them), workshops, mentoring sessions, and, of course, parties. Tix are $5 per screening or $20 for a weekend pass. Call 282-9008 for more info or check 'em out online at
www.reelwomen.org... Feeling midwifey? Yeah, me too. Here's your chance to "participate in the birthing" of a new film via
Movie Midwifing, a new series from
Alchemy Works designed to assist in the filmic creative process. Dallas screenwriter and playwright
Vicki Cheatwood will read from her script
The Swami, Tuesday, Aug. 1, 7:30pm, at Movements Gallery (211 E. Sixth). $5 gets you into the, uh,
birthing chamber, and more info can be had at 443-8229 or by e-mailing
[email protected]... Finally, the small town of Mason will be hosting the
International Wildlife Film Festival Aug. 1 and 2, 7pm, at the historic
Odeon Theater in Mason. The theme will be "Urban Wildlife and Human Impact on Wildlife" and at $5/night, you couldn't beat the price with a dead salamander. Call 915/347-5970 for more info.