Nathaniel Price
I’ve been reading recently about the rise of vertical storytelling and how it reflects changing viewing habits. It’s an exciting space that opens the door for a wider range of voices and stories, particularly from creatives who may not have had access to traditional pathways. That said, I still believe, and hope, that film and television will remain vital because storytelling is, at its core, a shared human experience. I’d love to see traditional platforms continue to be bold: championing projects that not only entertain, but also challenge societal norms, interrogate stereotypes, and offer diverse, original perspectives.
Marie Elena Dyche
My fear is about the stories that aren’t told – films that never are able to be materialised. It’s getting so much harder to make films. There are all these hoops that you have to jump through. There’s public funded money, which is there if you have x, y and z. But if you don’t meet that criteria, then what do you do? How do you find money in other ways?
Akinola Davies Jr
When there’s disruption new ideas probably resurface. But equally I think it’s always been difficult for people from my community, or similar communities to author our own stories. For so many people, there’s never really an entry point…
I think the fact that things have become difficult is going to make people think a little bit more about the stories – about why they’re telling them, or who they’re telling them with. I believe that things happen on cycles. And hopefully that happens with storytelling and filmmaking; we can return to things that have a lot more heart and a lot more feeling, and a lot more about understanding each other and where we’re from and the difficulties, we face.
Pinny Grylls
I’m optimistic because I think whenever there’s disruption, there’s new things. At the moment it’s very scary for people. There are a lot of people out of work. You can find a creative solution to it, like I did in a crisis when I lost my hearing …
People are very worried about AI filmmaking and how that’s going to break the industry… [but] I’m not worried about it because I listen to myself, and I think “What do I respond to when I’m watching something?” And it is that authenticity, that human storytelling.