Moving Cinema
Centre for the Moving Image
Film Education
Scotland
2018
Total project grant (euros)
148563
Programme
Creative Europe
Sub-programme
MEDIA
Funding scheme
Film Education
Call number
14/2017
Call publication date
14 Nov 2017
Application deadline
1 Mar 2018
Result publication date
6 Jul 2018
Number of partners in project
5
Lead organisation
A Bao a Qu (ES)
Partners
Centre for the Moving Image (UK);
Viešoji įstaiga Meno avilys (LT);
Landesverband Kinder- und Jugendfilm Berlin (DE);
Otok Institute (SI)
The main objectives of the Moving Cinema project are to create strong links between young people and cinema, to give them the tools to be autonomous spectators, and ultimately, to build active and sensitive audiences able to appreciate diverse cinema. The focus is on on contemporary and classic European auteur cinema, with special attention to films and filmmakers that differ from the mainstream, and yet are able to engage young people in a deep and meaningful way.
The project aims to explore these objectives through four strands of work:
- screenings and dialogues
- young programmers
- film practices with mobile devices (linking filmmaking to film viewing)
- discovering films on VoD platforms
Resources are published on the website with the intention of being useful for any organisations, institutions and people interested in the transmission of cinema. Through its activities, Moving Cinema builds an important network of festivals, cinemas, screening spaces, schools, institutions, teachers and filmmakers that work together for film education for young people.
Moving Cinema is a project led by A Bao A Qu and developed since 2014 with Meno Avilys (Lithuania) and Os Filhos de Lumière (Portugal). In 2015 the Centre for the Moving Image (Scotland) joined the project to work on the Young Programmers strand and La Cinémathèque Française (France) joined the project with the launch of Inside Cinema, an online space for the discovery of films through the materials of the creation processes.
In 2018-2020 Moving Cinema gathers 5 partners: A Bao A Qu (Spain), the Centre for Moving Image (UK), Kijufi (Germany), Meno Avilys (Lithuania) and Otok Institute (Slovenia). Os Filhos de Lumière (Portugal), La Cinémathèque française (France) and the British Film Institute (UK) are also part of the project.





