
Brett Gaylor's most engaging documentary,
RiP: A Remix Manifesto, screens at the
Mezzanine (444 Jessie Street at Mint) in San Francisco at 7pm this Thursday (July 23) as part of the
San Francisco Film Society's (SFFS)
SF360 Film+Club series. It will be a fun evening that will also include a live video mashup by London's notorious audio visual remix masters
Eclectic Method, plus a DJ set by
Adrian and
Mysterious D from the popular locally based mashup party
Bootie SF. Tickets are $12/SFFS year-round members, and $17/general,
available here.
In the new documentary, filmmaker/web-activist Gaylor, who will also be present at Thursday's Mezzanine screening, examines the ever-evolving subject of copyright in this digital age; a hot button topic if ever there were one, and one that has been at the center of many recent high profile lawsuits. For
RIP: A Remix Manifesto, which was six years in the making, Gaylor interivews many informed sources from near and far who are all affected somehow by the film's subject matter. Included are
Creative Commons founder
Lawrence Lessig, Brazil's Minister of Culture
Gilberto Gil, and pop culture critic
Cory Doctorow. But he turns his cameras' main focus to reigning mash-up and sample-king
Girl Talk (or
Greg Gillis, as they call him at home) to help get to the heart of the issue of sampling without permission, and the changing status of copyright law in this digital/information age.