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At the Media that Matters film festival this evening, I was chatting with some of the filmmakers about the way they approached their distribution plans early in the production process. I was interested to learn from one of the filmmakers, Ben Herson of African Underground: Hip Hop in Senegal, that though the short is part of a larger project and a feature is almost complete, the original plan was really to create these bite-sized clips, produced and edited in a matter of days, and post them to every available online media outlet possible. Speculatively, one might imagine that this viral approach would be challenging- sure, it’s good to get your work out there, but won’t it just sink into the sea of YouTube, Google Video, and other outlets’ overwhelming volume of content?

The lesson seems to be: no. The good stuff will float. Just as you could go to 30 film festivals in a year and then wonder, “are there amazing films that weren’t submitted/accepted that I am missing?” and as long as you were covering a good range of regions in your fest-going, there probably were not too many undiscovered gems that you didn’t have a chance to see. So a development strategy for filmmakers, especially in documentary, may simply be to blanket the world early on in the project and see if they get noticed. Certainly audience response is not the only reason to make a film, but it is usually an advantage when you are looking for money.


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Viral Development

infinite cinema

Distribution in the digital age. Film/video/future. A resource for independent filmmakers about new technologies, copyright, and digital rights management.

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