The YouTube Screening Room
July 4th, 2008 by adminHave you had a look at the films in The YouTube Screening Room yet? Launched in June, the Screening Room is a curated space that allows you to watch 4 new films every second Friday - many of them films that have played at film festivals like I Met The Walrus. Brent Hoff from Wholphin explains why this is such a great thing, as the Screening Room facilitates “an explosion of community. . . based solely on what people love.”
Sara Pollack, Film Manager at YouTube, wrote about her thoughts about the role of YouTube and digital distribution back in May in The Independent:
We’re starting to see ever more sophisticated uses of the medium, from major studios as well as indepen-dent film-makers. Of course, most people simply put their finished work on YouTube to promote their films and to make some money from advertising. But many are putting experimental ideas on the site to gauge the reaction and refine their plans, while others have used viewer feedback to determine where in the world to arrange showings when distribution budgets are tight. The point is that film-makers are involving the viewer in every stage of the process – from ideas-generation, to editing, to distribution.
Movie-making has always been about collaboration. But the new kinds of interactivity we’re seeing are blurring the division between fans and film-makers. Look at m.strange’s We Are the Strange, which viewers have translated into 17 different languages; look at
Four Eyed Monsters, which is about the couple who made it and how they met on a social networking site, and which has drawn so many video responses from viewers that they’ve edited their favourites into a follow-up film.
The mainstream is catching on. After its success online, Four Eyed Monsters got a DVD release, and after 32 million views, an amateur nature film called Battle at Kruger has been adapted for an hour-long National Geographic special




