Starring Sienna Miller and Paul Rudd, "The Catcher is a Spy" is the true story of Moe Berg, the baseball player and spy who helped the US win the race to build the atomic bomb in World War Two. Developed through the Sloan Film program, the film premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival.
Program Goal
To influence the next generation of filmmakers to tackle science and technology themes and characters, increase visibility for feature films that depict this subject matter, and develop new work that can be produced and released theatrically.
About
Launched in 1996, Sloan’s Film program has awarded grants to over 500 film projects from some of the nation’s most innovative filmmakers, and has created a film development pipeline of multiple program partners though which Sloan nurtures and develops individual projects. Over the past 15 years the Foundation has partnered with six of the top film schools in the country and established annual awards in screenwriting and film production, along with an annual best-of-the best Student Grand Jury Prize. The Foundation also supports screenplay development programs at the Sundance Film Institute, the Tribeca Film Institute, and Film Independent’s Producer’s Lab and Fast Track program. In 2015, Sloan added the prestigious San Francisco Film Society and the Black List to its screenplay development partners. To gain distribution for Sloan films, the Foundation has expanded Coolidge Corner Theater’s Science on Screen effort into a nationwide program that has awarded 94 grants to 47 independent cinemas, each of which shows at least one Sloan-supported film a year.
Film Schools
These grants support programs at leading film schools to encourage the emerging generation of filmmakers to tackle science and technology themes in their work. Film school programs include a diverse variety of opportunities for students, including seminars that introduce students to the latest scientific discoveries, access to scientific advisors to help with science content, awards for science themed projects, and networking events with industry insiders.
Currently supported film schools include:
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American Film Institute
screenwriting, production, and tuition awards
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UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television
screenwriting, production awards
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Carnegie Mellon University School of Drama
screenwriting awards
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Columbia University School of the Arts
screenwriting, production awards
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NYU Tisch School of the Arts
screenwriting, production, feature film awards
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USC School of Cinematic Arts
screenwriting, production, animation awards
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Each year, the Tribeca Film Festival awards $50,000 Sloan Student Grand Jury Prize to the best-of-the-best screenplay from the Foundation’s six film school partners.
Festivals and Development
The Foundation partners with influential film festivals or prominent institutions within Hollywood to fund efforts to raise the profile of science films and develop feature-length screenplays that can be produced and released theatrically.
Grants support a diverse range of activities, including feature film prizes, screenplay readings, panels, industry receptions, filmmaker fellowships, commissioning grants, production and distribution grants, and screenwriting labs.
Grantees in this program act as a development pipeline or “farm system” for the development of high-quality science themed projects. One project may receive support from multiple partners at different stages of development.
Current partners:
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Sundance Institute
Feature Film Prize, Commissioning Grant, Lab Fellowship [email protected]
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San Francisco Film Society
Science in Cinema Prize, Science in Cinema Filmmaker Fellowship
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Tribeca Film Institute
Filmmaker Fund Awards, Student Grant Jury Prize [email protected]
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The Black List
Screenwriters Lab [email protected]
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Film Independent
Producers Grant, Fast Track Grant, Distribution Grant [email protected]
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Former partners:
Production and Distribution
Grantmaking focuses on helping develop science-themed screenplays into production or in helping finished science-themed films find distribution.
Current partners:
Community-Building
Grantmaking focuses on creating a thriving community of filmmakers, film-lovers, and others who are passionate about science in film.
Every three years a Sloan Film Summit brings together all participating members and helps build cohesion, facilitate networking and engender excitement.
Current partners:
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Museum of the Moving Image
The web’s one-stop-shop for all things science and film. [email protected]
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Science and Entertainment Exchange
Connecting film industry professionals with working scientists
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Coolidge Corner Theatre Foundation
Independent theaters across the nation bring in top researchers to explore the science in cult and classic films. [email protected]
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News
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Variety
Sundance Film Review: ‘Search’
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USC News
Quirky thriller earns Sundance/Amazon prize for USC alums
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Broadway World
Award-Winning Script On Psychedelic Research In The '60s Gets L.A. Staged Reading
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IndieWire
‘Search’ Review: John Cho Stars In Thrilling Abduction Drama That Exists Entirely on a Computer Screen — Sundance 2018
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Los Angeles Times
'The Miseducation of Cameron Post,' 'Burden' take top prizes at a quiet Sundance Film Festival
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Cheddar
Cast of Search Breaks Down Inventive Thriller
Catalog of Supported Films
A catalog of Sloan-supported feature films that have been produced and released. For a full list of supported films, including shorts, unproduced scripts, and films in production but not yet released, visit the Sloan Science and Film website at scienceandfilm.org. For a complete list of Sloan-award-winning finished feature films, visit the Science on Screen site at scienceonscreen.org/films?sloan=true.
Apply
The Foundation does not accept unsolicited scripts, treatments, or pitch letters. Screenwriters or filmmakers who wish to apply for one of the various awards available through our festival or film development partners should go to the respective organization’s website for information about eligibility, application deadlines, etc.
The Foundation not currently seeking new film school or new film festival partners.