Showing posts with label Free is the new black. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Free is the new black. Show all posts

Monday, December 28, 2009

Free Is The New Black

According to Time:

When Finnish filmmaker Timo Vuorensola came up with the idea for his movie Star Wreck, a parody of Star Trek, he knew that looking for conventional distribution would be futile. An amateur, science-fiction comedy with a miniscule budget — and in Finnish, to boot — would hardly be attractive to mainstream studios. So Vuorensola took matters into his own hands: he used a Finnish social networking site to build up an online fan base who contributed to the storyline, made props and even offered their acting skills. In return for the help, Vuorensola released Star Wreck in 2005 online for free. Seven hundred thousand copies were downloaded in the first week alone; to date, the total has now reached 9 million.

"Releasing it for free is just good marketing," he says. "Whether it's through piracy or distribution your film is out there on the Internet, so we decided to harness this." And he has managed to make quite a bit of money out of it. Online sales of merchandise — including T-shirts and collector's editions of the DVD — have generated $430,000 on a film that only cost $21,500 to make, Vuorensola says. He and his team have also now secured a proper distribution deal with Revolver Entertainment in the U.S. and Britain.

Read the rest of the article here.

Thanks to Legionnaire Jim Henshaw for spotting this.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Merry Christmas Legionnaires!


Okay then,

For some reason I am in the giving mood.
(I must be sick)

I am posting the ultra-top secret link to the Pulp Legion Electrogram here on Pulp 2.0. Normally, you would have to sign up for (free for) this ranty goodness, but I am sending this Holiday special out far and wide.

If you like this 14 page missive and want more on a semi-regular basis, go ahead and sign up in the subscription area of the sidebar.

http://sites.google.com/site/cinexploits/home/2009-pulp-legion-electrogram-holiday-special

Bettie says it's the pulp thing to do...

Monday, September 28, 2009

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

I Will Be A New Pulp Baron...

From Matt Ridley's column in WIRED UK:

Consumer deflation is the whole point of the industrial revolution and its aftermath. Whereas it took 18 man-hours to turn a pound of cotton into cloth in the 1760s, it took only 90 minutes to do the same a century later. A person therefore needed to work a twelfth as long to clothe himself. Most of the great industrial robber barons got rich by making things cheaper. Andrew Carnegie cut the price of a steel rail by 75 per cent in 30 years between 1870 and 1900; John D Rockefeller slashed the price of oil by 80 per cent over the same period. Henry Ford’s first Model T sold for $825. Four years later he’d cut the price to $575.

It’s still happening today. Wal-Mart, Aldi and Ryanair won their market shares by ruthlessly charging us viciously lower prices. And here lies a cause for optimism in the midst of this recession. Even though jobs are being lost, houses repossessed and firms bankrupted, the underlying deflation caused by innovation is still going on – indeed, on the web, it’s accelerating. All over the internet, people are dreaming up ways of making things available to you more cheaply, more conveniently, more copiously and more quickly. That is what will cause prosperity to return one day.

(emphasis mine)

Thursday, November 13, 2008

One, Two, Three, Four...

Five! Five Sprockets! Muahahaha!

Five Sprockets is a website much like Celtx which allows people to collaborate on screenplays and documents online using screenplay, scheduling and breakdown tools...

All for free.

I uploaded a screenplay that is currently undergoing revision just to be able to play with the software and test it out. I am not certain 5S is where it needs to be yet in terms of attracting more users to the site, and becoming a tool that encourages growth in media.

However I am going to rewrite the script in this software just to shake loose some things and see where the flaws are hidden. I'm not certain that this site is providing a much-needed function in the professional production community. Is there an actual need for online collaboration at a central site?

But like I said earlier I am going to test drive it for awhile, figure it out and go from there. I invite you to do the same and let me know what you think.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Free is the New Black


We've talked about the internet and free before, gang and it seems that everyone has read the Wired article and leaped onto the new internet economy or pointed the way to the land of the free...

But really I didn't expect these.

And in fiddling around, I didn't expect to find these either.

Nor these.

Wow.

I am spent.