You’ve heard the old saying a million times: the three keys to success are “location, location, location!” Your Florida video production is no exception to that rule. Location and scenery can make or break your project, whether you’re producing a big-budget, feature-length film or a 30-second commercial. Whether you’re a longtime local or an out-of-towner bringing your project to the Sunshine State, Digital Video Arts can help you pinpoint and secure the perfect location for your Florida video production.

From sprawling coastal homes to quaint country shacks to sleek downtown flats, DVA can help secure the perfect location for your Florida video production.
DVA’s producers have years of experience in the art of location scouting for films, videos, television commercials and Internet video productions throughout Florida. Many don’t know that 100 years ago, Florida’s Jacksonville area (where DVA is located) was known as the “Winter Film Capital of the World” and is widely considered the first site for on-location filming. A century later, film and video producers still come to Florida for the same reasons that attracted filmmaking’s earliest pioneers, including the state’s year-round mild climate and exterior location options that include “everything except mountains – and we can green screen those,” as the saying goes.
Sandy beaches; modern downtown skylines; quaint, rural towns; ornate, century-old mansions and gardens; Anywhere, USA suburbia homes; and wooded swamplands that double for faraway jungles are just a few of the Florida video production location options available for both exterior and interior shooting. DVA’s production team has a knack for finding just the right locations that help communicate your project’s feel and message. And, we can help you sure permission to use chosen locations, including negotiating city permits and location fees.
To find and secure the ideal location for your Florida video production, contact DVA today.
Tags: digital video arts, documentary, dva, film location scouting, florida, Florida film production, florida video production, jacksonville, preproduction services, television location scouting, TV location scouting, video production scouting
Posted in Florida Film History, Pre-production Services by admin : July 11, 2010 - 5:00am | No Comments »
Several Florida film production legends were honored tonight by Film Florida, a nonprofit organization that provides a leadership role in Florida’s film and entertainment industries by representing a coalition of interests, including private industry, local film commissions, industry associations and labor organizations. The organization’s annual Film Florida Legends Awards honors those who have been key in building the Florida film production industry. This year’s honorees, all from the Jacksonville area, are late silent filmmaker Richard E. Norman, film and TV producer Jerry Smith and film distributor Belton Clark.

Poster advertising "The Flying Ace" by filmmaker Richard E. Norman, one of three honored at the recent Film Florida Legend Awards Gala. Film and TV producer Jerry Smith and distributor Belton Clark also were honored.
Richard Norman was among the earliest Florida Film production professionals. He produced what at the time were called “race films” during the 1910s and 1920s. Race films were the first to feature African American actors playing positive, non-stereotypical roles. Norman produced a string of successful race films starring some of the top black entertainers of the day including Bill Pickett, known as America’s first black rodeo star. His only known surviving film, The Flying Ace, is said to have inspired many of the earliest black aviators including a number of the famed Tuskegee Airmen. Norman’s five-building studio complex still stands in Jacksonville’s Old Arlington district and efforts are under way by the City of Jacksonville and the Norman Studios Silent Film Museum to restore and reopen the property as a museum and film learning center.
Jerry Smith, founder and CEO of PineRidge Film & Television, is an internationally recognized writer, producer, and director of lifestyle television programs, TV commercials, corporate communications and online content. Over his 35-year career, he created and directed promotional campaigns for nearly every major television ownership group in America, including Post-Newsweek, Hearst-Argyle Television, Scripps Networks, PBS, Discovery Networks, CBN, Home and Garden Network (HGTV), Fine Living, Food Network plus ABC, NBC and CBS-Owned Television Stations. PineRidge is best known over the past decade for its travel series projects including Great Hotels, Passport to Europe, Passport to Latin America, Girl Meets Hawaii, and Great Vacation Homes. Pine Ridge has landed six national Emmy awards and 11 nominations.
Belton Clark’s career as a prolific film distributor spans 40 years. He founded Clark Film Co. after he and his brother Harry acquired the rights to Allied Artists Films during the late 1960s and the company remains strong today. Clark has handled releases including Pulp Fiction, Shakespeare in Love, Kill Bill, Good Will Hunting, The English Patient, Sling Blade, Bridget Jones Diary, My Left Foot, Stanley and more. Up next: the release of this summer’s Piranha 3D.
Digital Video Arts congratulates all the winners of the Film Florida Legends Awards.
Tags: Belton Clark, digital video arts, dva, Film Florida, Film Florida Legend Awards, florida, Florida film production, jacksonville, Jerry Smith, Richard Norman, Silent Film
Posted in Events, Florida Film History, Industry by admin : June 23, 2010 - 5:00am | 2 Comments »