Curating the indy film audience

Courtney Sheehan, writing on The Independent, believes Art House Streaming Platforms [are] Uniquely Poised to Build Online Film Communities.

I’ve been thinking about curation and the mediascape. In the analogue era, the centralized control of media curated what we saw because its dissemination had gatekeepers. We couldn’t watch what wasn’t on offer. Contrast that with the digital era — we’re drowning in choice. Perhaps curation is one way to focus on quality.

Courtney’s article has three sections.

She begins with FilmStruck, a US-only collaboration between Turner Classic Movies and The Criterion Collection:

“The Criterion Channel features ongoing curated series like a short and feature pairing on Tuesdays and a Friday night double feature. Original content includes deep dives into film analysis, spotlights on art house theaters across the country, in-depth film introductions, new film commissions, and filmmaker interviews. By layering the viewing experience with additional content, the Criterion Channel hopes to invite viewers to sophisticated conversations about film.”

She then moves on to MUBI, an online streamer with a unique model: a new film is made available each day and no films stay up for more than 30 days:

“MUBI champions festival films that wouldn’t otherwise get distributed, and regularly mounts retrospectives. Another facet of MUBI’s strong brand is The Notebook, an online magazine that contextualizes its releases as well as providing general festival coverage and filmmaker interviews. Given the highly curated and diverse offerings on MUBI’s site, the company is confident in their continued ability to cut through the noise of limitless options to reach film lovers online.”

She concludes with social media by quoting Alece Oxendine, a digital distribution specialist, saying:

“‘Twitter is the rapid response, the stream of conscious thoughts about film. Facebook is more the share economy, everyone is sharing what they’re finding out. More context is provided on Facebook. Conversations are definitely happening on Reddit but it still feels new, which is crazy because as a platform it makes the most sense for community — the threads, the subthreads, you can get very, very granular where you’re just discussing film.'”

Interestingly, Courtney points out that “MUBI, Criterion, and IMDB have all shuttered their message boards and forums in recent years.” She also reports that MUBI offered 60-day free trials to the members of /r/truefilm on Reddit to bolster their audience.

My take: FilmStruck and MUBI both sound like digital versions of the repertory cinema chain I worked for in the early eighties, Festival Cinemas. They can provide needed context for viewers. Got to admit I have not explored Reddit in any depth. Interestingly, it’s purely text-based.

CMF releases Discoverability report

Trends by the Canada Media Fund has released the second part of its research into Discoverability and discovered that Canadian viewers are both aspirational and inspirational:

“All they are looking for is to be happy, have the best day possible and — ultimately — be validated and inspire their friends. In a nutshell, they are seeking to live a fulfilling experience.”

Other takeaways, quoting liberally:

  • The more audiences are offered the convenience of on-demand content and a varied range of content to choose, the more they watch content online. [Duh.]
  • 59% of Canadian TV viewers aged 18+ say they discover new TV content through recommendations from friends. [Witness the Rise of Social Media.]
  • It’s the X, Y and Z generations (the 18 to 49-year-olds) that not surprisingly rely on their friends for discovery, whereas boomers rely more on TV and radio commercials. [True, but keep in mind the oldest Gen-X’ers are 56 now and the youngest Gen-Z’ers are not yet teenagers.]
  • Being a viewer, or a consumer of content, is much more multifaceted than sitting back and having content just ‘wash’ over you. The state of ‘audience-ness’ is now dynamic, participatory, cross-channel, and both synchronous (in real time) and asynchronous. [Welcome to the Matrix.]

Read the complete PDF.

My take: Word-of-mouth still rules! Only now, you might ‘hear’ it online first — and your friend might live on another continent rather than around the corner.