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    Home»Exclusives»Indie Film Can’t Afford Risk of Not Taking Risks: Locarno Pro Report
    Exclusives

    Indie Film Can’t Afford Risk of Not Taking Risks: Locarno Pro Report

    adminBy adminSeptember 25, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    The independent film industry can’t afford the risk of not taking risks. That is one of the key conclusions of the StepIn 2025 Report, published on Thursday by Locarno Pro, the Locarno Film Festival‘s industry program.

    Entitled “Embracing the Risk(s), But How?,” the report concludes that “cinema’s future depends on its ability to reframe risk across the ecosystem – not as a liability, but as the driving force behind originality, impact, and audience growth,” adding: “Overall, the participants agreed that the independent film industry cannot afford the risk of not taking risks. Risk lies at the core of cinema and should be embraced in the best possible way.”

    StepIn is conceived as an interdisciplinary and international think tank that allows distributors, exhibitors, producers, sales agents, film institutions, financiers, streaming platforms, broadcasters, and representatives of film festivals and markets to discuss, in closed working sessions, the state of the film industry. Marcello Paolillo served as project manager of the 14th edition this August, with AC Coppens of The Catalysts moderating the event. 

    The four topics at the center of this year’s StepIn program were: independent production between public and private financing; independent distribution today: “The art of taking risks and how to handle it;”
    festivals and the press; and building a truly inclusive audiovisual industry.

    The sections also compiled various recommendations. Among them: create public–private partnerships to strengthen production companies and enable “higher-budget projects without losing talent to other markets;” recognize entertainment as an asset class by educating investors in Europe; “the industry should consider streamer investment obligations to reinvest a share of locally generated revenue into national eco-systems;” expand revenue channels by using AVOD, PVOD, and self-distribution; push for transparent streaming data; “reframe ticket pricing to attract younger audiences, using flexible models, memberships, and reduced-price days;” and “DEI needs a reframe in the narrative – as a revenue-generating/audience-growing versus a box-ticking exercise for businesses.”

    The StepIn report concluded with a list of “bold requirements,” including “stop fetishizing ‘safe’ choices – they rarely are;” “embrace the changes;” “financing and distribution are two sides of the same coin: if one collapses, the other follows;” “transparency is oxygen;” and “collaboration beats competition in audience-building.”

    AI also got a recommendation, namely “AI should not be taboo.” Explains the Stepin report: “Used wisely, it’s a powerful tool for segment-oriented, data-driven strategies. The mix of algorithmic insight and human emotional intelligence is a winning combination for reducing risk and achieving success in production and distribution strategies.”

    Among the high-profile film industry veterans appearing at Locarno Pro this summer were Poor Things, Pillion, and My Father’s Shadow producer Ed Guiney of Element Pictures, Yorgos Lanthimos’ longtime producer, Berlin Film Festival director Tricia Tuttle, and AGC Studios chairman and CEO Stuart Ford. A conversation between free-spirited Romanian auteur Radu Jude and Guiney about the relationship between director and producer took people behind the scenes of the magic of movies. And comedian and disability advocate Maysoon Zayid (You Don’t Mess With the Zohan, General Hospital) inspired dialogue in a session dubbed “Somewhere Over the Rainbow: Making Movies That Save Lives.”

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