February 16th, 2012

What does an Oscar and an A-list celebrity get you?

Not much, apparently.  Chuck Tryon describes his amusing experience trying to rent the Matt Damon-narrated, Oscar-winning feature film Inside Job:

But after Ferguson’s powerful Oscar acceptance speech, in which he reminded us that not a single financial executive had gone to jail for his or her responsibility in the financial meltdown, the film seemed to disappear. For that reason alone, I was glad that MoveOn picked it up as a part of its house party series. It’s worth noting that the current home video ecosystem likely contributes to that. The documentary was distributed by Sony Pictures Classics and through Sony’s Home Entertainment division, and (because of that?) it is currently unavailable for streaming on Netflix. None of the Blockbuster Video stores in the area had the movie available for rental. And when I called one local video store to ask for Inside Job, the clerk stepped briefly away from the phone, came back and gruffly asked, “do you want the adult version?” The movie was also unavailable through Redbox kiosks, which ultimately meant that we had to purchase a copy for our house party. I don’t think this is a specific “conspiracy,” just that our current distribution model provides much greater potential for independent and low-budget films to “disappear” from public consciousness and even easy (or at least inexpensive) access. As a result, even hosting a screening now seems like a valuable contribution to the wider political discussion.

That is the sad state of domestic distribution in the United States.  The only reason Ferguson’s documentary remains at all relevant is because it inspires conversation.  Whatever you make, make sure it inspires conversation.

  1. therabbitisme reblogged this from directingfilm
  2. genevievefaust reblogged this from directingfilm and added:
    conversation.”
  3. firelotusfilm reblogged this from directingfilm and added:
    Says a lot about our...system, and maybe something about how though there are lots of...
  4. nickibramos reblogged this from directingfilm
  5. deftbeck reblogged this from directingfilm and added:
    why a whole new network...that supports variety and flexibility needs to be created
  6. directingfilm posted this
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@dschmudde

Techniques for directing film. More than the script, bigger than the screen - the tangible and mystical characteristics of truly great filmmaking.