Fiscal Sponsorship

Donate To Productions By IFP/Chicago Members!

Below you will find the current projects IFP/Chicago serves as a Fiscal Sponsor for.  Please click on the button which corresponds to the film you would like to donate to.  For more information about the Fiscal Sponsorship Program, please scroll down.


Louder Than A Bomb

A Documentary by Greg Jacobs & Jon Siskel

Louder Than a Bomb is a film about passion, competition, teamwork, and trust. It’s about the joy of being young, and the pain of growing up. It’s about speaking out, making noise, and finding your voice.

It also just happens to be about poetry.

A documentary feature intended for theatrical release, Louder Than a Bomb tells the stereotype-confounding stories of four Chicago-area high school poetry teams as they prepare for and compete in the world’s largest youth slam. By turns hopeful and heartbreaking, the film captures the tempestuous lives of these exceptional kids, exploring the ways writing shapes their world, and vice versa. This is not “high school poetry” as we often think of it. This is language as a joyful release, irrepressibly talented teenagers obsessed with making words dance. Set against the backdrop of Barack Obama’s historic primary campaign, Louder Than a Bomb paints a powerful and timely portrait of the Obama generation, from the heart of the president’s hometown.

Louder Than a Bomb had its world premiere at the Cleveland International Film Festival in March 2010, where it won both the Roxanne T. Mueller Audience Choice Award for best film and the Greg Gund Memorial Standing Up Film Competition for films that celebrate social justice and activism. For more information, contact ltab@siskeljacobs.com


Typing

Director – Jack C. Newell
Writer – Ron Falzone
Producer – Ron Falzone & Jack C. Newell

Typing is the story of what happens when the creative process crashes head first into the wall of stereotypes and clichés.  It features writer/actor/comedy legend Tim Kazurinsky and Steppenwolf ensemble member Francis Guinan as two tired MGM screenwriters forced into the impossible task of having to write a Robert Montgomery movie that features sex, adventure and a dog.


Postales

Writer/Director – Josh Hyde
Producer – Claire Connelly,  Maxi Holland,  Dan Fischer, and P.J. Fishwick

In the ancient cobblestone streets, of Cuzco, Peru, 11-year-old Pablo sells postcards to tourists in the town square, and his brother, Jano, lives a life of petty crime to help their family survive. Pablo’s world turns upside down when he encounters Mary, who unbeknownst to him is the daughter of an American businessman planning to develop the land on which his family lives.

When told they will be forced to leave their longtime home, Jano swears vengeance, and convinces his younger brother to help him rob the American. After the crime, Pablo shockingly discovers a photograph of Mary in the victim’s wallet. He vows to right this wrong by finding Mary and giving it back.

After locating Mary a couple of days later, Pablo convinces her to sneak away with him to explore the Inca ruins. While searching for Mary, her distraught parents return to their hotel only to find Elizabeth in bed with Jano, the boy who robbed her father. After a scuffle, Mary appears in the hotel room with her father’s wallet.

As the Americans prepare to depart Cuzco, and the Peruvian family packs to leave their home, both families are irreversibly altered by their contact with the other.

IFP/Chicago’s Fiscal Sponsorship Program!

Many individuals, foundations, corporations or governmental organizations restrict funding of independent projects to tax-exempt organizations. To address this situation, IFP/Chicago (an established tax-exempt public charity under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) has created the IFP/Chicago Fiscal Sponsorship Program. The Fiscal Sponsorship program at IFP/Chicago has been designed to assist media artists who are members of IFP/Chicago seeking grants and/or contributions from sources which require a federal exempt tax status, i.e., a non-profit organizational status. For individual contributors, this arrangement allows for charitable contribution deductions on federal tax returns. Selected projects will be allowed to use IFP/Chicago’s federal exempt tax status to individuals under the following conditions:

•Applicant must be a Member of IFP/Chicago in good standing;
•The project must be noncommercial in nature;
•The individual media artist must sign a contract with IFP/Chicago which states the artist guarantees grant monies received will be used for the purpose intended; that artist will be responsible for fines, return of grant monies, etc. if grant is rescinded or the IRS questions the accounting for the grant monies; and that artist will be responsible for any final reports and accounting to the granting agency.
•Artist agrees to credit IFP/Chicago on project being served.

Once the IFP/Chicago Fiscal Sponsorship Program accepts your project, donors may make tax-deductible contributions to IFP/Chicago, requesting that the funds be applied toward your project. IFP/Chicago will make its various programs available to you, monitor your project to ensure that the project advances IFP/Chicago’s charitable and educational purposes and disburse the contributions received, minus the fee. You will be responsible for providing IFP/Chicago with periodic reports of the status of your project and the use of the funds.

IFP/Chicago does not control the content of the project and is not connected, in any way, to the actual production of your project. All right, title and interest in and to the completed project belongs to the filmmaker allowing them complete artistic and creative control.

Download the Fiscal Sponsorship Application!

Questions about Fiscal Sponsorship? Email us!