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Lights, cell phone, action

Film contest offers prize for best movie shot entirely with camera phone

Film student looks at cell phone
"I hope people studying film will take it as my generation's chance to provide a new language, a new way of thinking," says Sudhanshu Saria, a senior at Ithaca College taking part in the cell phone film contest.
Kevin Rivoli / AP
updated 1:43 p.m. ET Dec. 22, 2005

ITHACA, N.Y. - Bigger houses, bigger cars, bigger portions at the local fast food joint. In America, the guiding maxim is to think big. Really big.

An Ithaca College dean is encouraging students to instead think small. And she's offering a $5,000 prize to do it.

The school has invited high school and college students across America to submit a 30-second movie shot entirely with a cell phone.

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It may come off like a gimmick, but Dean Dianne Lynch has no doubts about the contest's academic value.

In today's media marketplace — where cell phones can take pictures, play music and games and connect to Web sites — it's all about thinking small and mobile.

"Historically, we've always had students thinking bigger and bigger. It's gone from radio to television to the movie screen, to the era of blockbuster films. All of a sudden, things have reversed and everything is getting smaller," said Lynch.

The submission deadline is Jan. 10. A winner will be chosen from among 10 finalists and announced online Jan. 30.

The idea came to Lynch last year while she was in New York City attending an industry conference. One of the topics was the future of mobile delivery of content.

Disasters like Hurricane Katrina and the July bombings in London showed what cell phone cameras are capable of, as everyday people used them to provide TV stations and the Internet with vivid images of the devastation.

There are an estimated 2 billion mobile phone subscribers worldwide and 194.5 million in the United States, according to the Washington, D.C.-based CTIA The Wireless Association.

About 130 million Americans own cell phones with camera capabilities and approximately half of those camera phones also shoot video, said Roger Entner, an analyst with Ovum, a Boston-based technology consulting firm.

This fall, MTV launched "Head and Body," a comedy series of eight programs created exclusively for cell phone users. Last year, Zoie Films, an Atlanta-based producer of independent films and festivals, ran what it billed as the world's first cell-phone film festival.

And in October, the Forum des Images in Paris held its first Pocket Film Festival, which included everything from 30-second shorts to mini-soap operas to full-length features.


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