“Crossing Acheron” Is an Official Selection of the 2023 Coney Island Film Festival

Big news! I’m happy to announce that my sci-fi short film, CROSSING ACHERON, was selected for the 2023 Coney Island Film Festival, continuing its festival run. It was previously shown at the 2021 New York Pause Film Festival, the 2021 New Haven International Film Festival and the 2023 Chicago Blow-Up Arthouse Filmfest. I’m excited that my film—made in the depths of the pandemic and tackling themes of both disease and loss—has maintained its widespread appeal, even after the return to ‘normal life.’ 

Crossing Acheron imagines a world not so different from our own, in which rampant plague and brain-altering technology are inexorably intertwined. A woman finds herself faced with an impossible decision: end her life by uploading her consciousness to an AI generated world that contains the soul of her deceased mother, or live out her days in an unfriendly city riddled with illness. 

Although the technology in the film seems like an unlikely innovation, Elon Musk and other Silicon Valley giants have a demonstrated interest in the consolidation of human consciousness with machines. Despite the idea’s chilling implications, there are those who not only believe in its feasibility, but believe that such a technology is an imminent reality. 

In an era mediated by invasive AI, Crossing Acheron is a contemporary reflection on Descartes classic assertion—“I think, therefore I am”—asking crucial questions about what it means to have a mind, what it means to be alive and what it means to die. How does the capacity to digitize a consciousness change us existentially, individually and ethically? 

It’s exciting to know that the film will be up on the big screen once again! 

The Coney Island Film Festival will take place May 5-7, 2023. Those interested in watching a screener or writing a review may contact me through this website. Thank you!

Crossing Acheron - A film written and directed by Benjamin Reeves
‘Crossing Acheron,’ a sci-fi short film from screenwriter and director Benjamin Reeves, is an official selection of the 2023 Coney Island Film Festival.

How We Launched a Cross-Platform Digital Storyworld

Last week I launched a new creative project: Ballads of the Distant Reaches, a bi-weekly anthology of illustrated fantasy short stories. I started developing this project almost one year ago, and began working with co-creator and co-editor Robert Frankel shortly thereafter. This project brings together some of the top genre writers working today with an incredible team of illustrators, including our lead artist, Eisner Award-winner Shay Plummer.

Rothus 'ja Darden, Imperial Bard.
Rothus ‘ja Darden, Imperial Bard. Art by Shay Plummer.

For those who know me as a screenwriter and filmmaker, Ballads of the Distant Reaches won’t come as much of a surprise. For those in my audience who know me better as a journalist or media consultant, I think you’ll find other elements of this to be interesting: The narrative structure, cross-platform digital storytelling capabilities, and development process are highly adaptable and can be applied to a range of projects beyond a fictional universe, including non-fiction or branded storytelling.

Ballads of the Distant Reaches has a deceiving simplicity to it: We publish a new illustrated short story every two weeks, and publish newsletter-style content about the project on off-weeks. The stories and newsletters are delivered directly to the inboxes of our subscribers. In terms of its narrative structure and potential scale, however, it’s highly complex.

Narrative Structure

The Ballads of the Distant Reaches storyworld is constantly expanding, both with lore developed by us, and with additions from our writers. While all of the stories take place in the same fictional universe and function as an anthology, we’ve used a unique “story within a story” structure to maximize the creative freedom of our writers while keeping the overarching story moving forward. Ballads of the Distant Reaches revolves around the “Conclave of Bards,” a gathering of storytellers from throughout the fictional universe, who are all competing to tell the best story. It’s a little bit like The Canterbury Tales.

This narrative structure allows us to map an entire year-long cycle of stories, similar to the way a TV writers room would. It also allows our writers significant creative freedom. They all receive a prompt and some basic information about where their story falls within the narrative cycle, then it’s up to them to fill in the gaps. The Lore we’ve developed functions like a set of rules; the goal is to open doors for our creators rather than prohibiting creativity.

This collaborative storytelling process will be familiar to anyone who has played a tabletop RPG such as Dungeons & Dragons, but is exceedingly rare in the realm of entertainment. This approach allows us to be highly collaborative, very flexible, and lean enough to find new and exciting angles and stories we might not have uncovered on our own — all while working within the storyworld and narrative cycle we defined at the very beginning.

Cross-Platform Storytelling

Ballads of the Distant Reaches aims to maximize the potential of true cross-platform storytelling (sometimes referred to as trans-media storytelling in Hollywood). In practical terms, this means that right now, while the short stories on www.distantreaches.com are the narrative core of the project, we also began producing and distributing unique narrative and lore elements across our social media channels. (For those curious about such things, Twitter has been by far the most successful social media platform for this project.)

We’ve deliberately launched our social media program so that it contributes to the storyworld instead of simply serving as marketing (although there’s a bit of that, too). While the bulk of our audience will engage with the project on our website or via email, those who follow us on social media will get an even richer experience as a result. The story, in other words, flows across these platforms.

Long term, the plan is to add additional platforms. While the short stories on www.distantreaches.com are the narrative core of the project, we developed the world and the story structure with the intention of expanding it into other media — from podcasts, film, and TV/streaming to books and interactive media such as video or tabletop games. As with our approach to social media, we don’t intend these to be duplicative of the short stories, although there will certainly be some overlap. Instead, these expansions  will be truly additive, molding the world of the Distant Reaches to best fit each new platform.

Why It Matters

All this focus on structure and storytelling process may seem very inside baseball to some. But it relates directly to how effective the project will be.

My experience is that writers, artists, and creative types do their best work when they feel like they are empowered to be creative and when their talents and passions will directly contribute to the final output, be it a film, storyworld, magazine, marketing campaign, or newspaper. When we build our stories collaboratively rather than proscriptively, we foster and share the belief that the stories themselves will be more interesting and more surprising as a result — and will reach a wider audience because of that.

Likewise, the choice to tell our stories across platforms is key. Social media allows for collaboration and interaction with our audience in a way that other formats do not. And once we begin adding additional platforms such as podcasts or novelizations, we’ll reach even more new people and provide additional levels of depth for dedicated and casual fans alike. This is a tactic Disney and Marvel have perfected. Most people engage with the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the multiplex or on Disney+. More dedicated fans, however, also read the comic books, play the video games, and watch both the shows and theatrical films. Closer to our space, Wizards of the Coast has cultivated a similar environment around Dungeons & Dragons with books, campaigns, video games, podcasts, novels, and myriad other ways to engage.

Next Steps

We are still in the early days of this project. In the immediate term, please visit us at www.distantreaches.com and subscribe with your email address. This ensures you’ll receive every piece we publish. You can also follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

As our audience and subscriber base grows, we’ll begin developing additional platforms such as podcasts. This won’t be a fast process. For one thing, we’re growing this organically with limited resources — and a commitment to paying our writers and artists from day one. Our focus at the outset is on cultivating an audience and building the core of the storyworld. For another, it’s important to spend time on development. Rushing anything — particularly a creative endeavor — rarely yields good results. We’re only at the beginning of the journey, and there’s still lots of world to explore!

We would also love to hear from you. Please subscribe, and feel free to reach out with collaborations, suggestions, feedback, or just to say “hi.” You can message me here , or write to me at ben@distantreaches.com. Thank you!

This article originally appeared on LinkedIn.

“Crossing Acheron” Premieres at 2021 New York Pause Film Festival

I am incredibly excited to announce that Crossing Acheron premiered at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in downtown Brooklyn as part of the 2021 New York Pause Film Festival presented by the Katra Film Series and Bowery Film Festival. The cast and crew had worked incredibly hard to create this film during the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic, without any assurance that it would ever screen live. Seeing it on the big screen was an amazing experience.

In addition to the New York Pause Film Festival, the film is also an Official Selection of the 2021 New Haven International Film Festival, and we hope this is just the beginning of its festival run.

Feel free to reach out for a press kit or digital screener.

Crossing Acheron - A film written and directed by Benjamin Reeves

 

New accolades for “Kane the Gunslinger” and “Influencers”

There’s some more big news on the screenwriting front! In the last few weeks, both KANE THE GUNSLINGER and INFLUENCERS have had some major breakthroughs on their journey to the silver screen. Obviously there’s still a long way to go before either project goes into production, but the continued support from readers, mentors and labs is a huge boost.

KANE THE GUNSLINGER was an official selection for the prestigious 2020 Stowe Story Labs, where I pitched to a range of producers, managers, and other entertainment professionals. The Lab also offered some incredible lectures and talks from industry leaders and screenwriters, as well as the opportunity to workshop works-in-progress with peers.

KANE THE GUNSLINGER also recently earned an eight on The Blacklist! For those who are not familiar with it, The Blacklist is one of Hollywood’s top spots for discovering new scripts, and only roughly 2% of scripts earn of rating of eight or higher. Obviously that rating is merely an indication of one reader’s taste, but every little bit counts.

Over on the INFLUENCERS front, Director Robert Gregson and I were excited to be an official selection and attend the 2020 Northeast Filmmakers Lab. We honed our pitch, made some great connections, and received invaluable information as we embark on the journey of developing the film. We’ve been further buoyed by successes in two high profile annual screenwriting competitions. INFLUENCERS was a second rounder for the 2020 Launch Pad Screenplay Competition and is a quarterfinalist—and still in the running—for the FinalDraft Big Break Competition.

Breakthroughs for “Influencers”

I have two exciting announcements on Influencers. The project—a neo-noir thriller feature I wrote and which was co-created with director Robert Gregson—has advanced to the second round of the prominent Launch Pad Feature Screenplay Competition. It also an official selection for the 2020 Northeast Filmmakers Lab, and Gregson and I are excited to pitch the project and advance it that much closer to production. For more info on Influencersyou can view the logline and teaser trailer here. To request the script, or with any questions, please reach out via the contact page.

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