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7 days to Veronica Mars movie
I keep meaning to post about this and then getting distracted, and it's probably all over Tumblr anyway, but hey.
So, last year, when the Kickstarter campaign got announced, I was both intrigued and wary -- what a cool idea! But erk, what if Hollywood decides "get the fans to pay to make the movie, then pay to watch it, woo" is a great business model? But I figured there's no way this movie had a chance in hell of happening otherwise, and I'd loved first season VM, so... sure. I kicked in. Then watched in awe as the numbers climbed and climbed and CLIMBED.
From the get-go, I thought Rob Thomas was being pretty damn decent about everything. The rewards were spread out nicely, and a digital download came at a lower level than the DVD, instead of being added as an extra perk for a higher level, so more people had a shot at it. The original idea was to get people the digital download a few days after the theater premiere, which is more than reasonable.
I've been on the backers update mailings ever since, and I gotta say: the VM team is working its ass off to make this movie available to as many people as possible, as fast as possible, with as few hurdles as possible. The first few months were obviously focused on making the movie, but the last few months have all been about distribution as far and wide as possible.
At this point:
This is all just sort of unreal, in terms of how Hollywood usually treats fans. They're going way out of their way to make this as inclusive a deal as possible. Warner Bros is doing a lot of the heavy lifting there; they told him they'd do distribution if he raised the money to make it. But this is just staggering. Free screenings, international distribution deals (whatever they set up with Germany set back the DVD release, so there's some real negotiation going on here), merch and fic that fans can get a cut of, simultaneous global digital release across both broadcast/on-demand and download services, not to mention on the same day as the global theater release... holy cow. If this is the lesson Hollywood takes away from this Kickstarter, everyone wins, man.
I can't believe all of this has only taken a single year. This is amazing stuff.
So, last year, when the Kickstarter campaign got announced, I was both intrigued and wary -- what a cool idea! But erk, what if Hollywood decides "get the fans to pay to make the movie, then pay to watch it, woo" is a great business model? But I figured there's no way this movie had a chance in hell of happening otherwise, and I'd loved first season VM, so... sure. I kicked in. Then watched in awe as the numbers climbed and climbed and CLIMBED.
From the get-go, I thought Rob Thomas was being pretty damn decent about everything. The rewards were spread out nicely, and a digital download came at a lower level than the DVD, instead of being added as an extra perk for a higher level, so more people had a shot at it. The original idea was to get people the digital download a few days after the theater premiere, which is more than reasonable.
I've been on the backers update mailings ever since, and I gotta say: the VM team is working its ass off to make this movie available to as many people as possible, as fast as possible, with as few hurdles as possible. The first few months were obviously focused on making the movie, but the last few months have all been about distribution as far and wide as possible.
At this point:
- They got the entire series streaming on Amazon Prime in time for people to watch one ep per day leading up to the movie release.
- The movie's being released widely across the US. And there are advanced screenings the night before in 17 US cities. For a fan-funded movie.
- The movie will premiere in theaters in Canada, the UK, Ireland, and Germany on the same day. No staggered releases. (... wait, I take that back. Germany's premiering it on the 13th, a day earlier than the US.)
- Some countries that aren't officially getting it in theaters are getting "fan screenings" set up by Warner Bros: Sweden, Mexico, Australia.
- Can't get a theater or fan event? Check your cable/satellite, or digital retailers (like Amazon or iTunes). This is being released digitally across the world on premiere day. All backers who contributed at least $35 will be sent instructions on how to stream/download their copies on the same day as well. No waiting.
- They've set up a line of tie-in novels. Because fan-funded film. The first book is co-written by Rob Thomas and will be available on March 25 (I haven't read the blurb or anything else, and would rather not hear spoilers, if this is canonical to post-VM-movie, tyk!). He's already said that the first novel is canonical to both show and movie, and will remain so; if there's another movie, it will either be an adaptation of that book or will be set after it. (Which totally counts as a gift to the fans because look at all the arguments about "yeah but is the book *canon*?" he just stopped!)
- At the same time Rob Thomas is working on his own tie-in novels, he's added the VM universe to Kindle Worlds and announced that now people can write fanfic! Which, okay, I pat them on their little heads at the idea that fans need an official sandbox to play in, but still: it's a solid tip of the hat to the idea that this universe is about more than just them, and it gives fans who want to go that route a chance to make some money for their fanfic, just like him (at least in theory). (Also, sort of adorably, he carefully explains that Kindle Worlds novels won't be canon, they'll be fanon. Although tsk, he links to Wikipedia instead of Fanlore for both definitions. Someone needs to put him in touch with Orlando Jones, he'll steer him right.)
- They set up a Cafepress fan portal as the gateway to all VM merchandise on Cafepress -- from official merch to fan-created stuff, all mixed in together. Fan-created stuff has limitations like no images from the source, and needs to be approved before it's added, but anyone can make it, and again can make some cash on sales of stuff relating to this universe, with official blessing.
- For US folks only, Apple has a few Countdown to Veronica Mars offers, including a free download of the extended pilot (not the aired version), a behind-the-scenes featurette, and ways to order or pre-order VM stuff (soundtrack, novel, movie).
This is all just sort of unreal, in terms of how Hollywood usually treats fans. They're going way out of their way to make this as inclusive a deal as possible. Warner Bros is doing a lot of the heavy lifting there; they told him they'd do distribution if he raised the money to make it. But this is just staggering. Free screenings, international distribution deals (whatever they set up with Germany set back the DVD release, so there's some real negotiation going on here), merch and fic that fans can get a cut of, simultaneous global digital release across both broadcast/on-demand and download services, not to mention on the same day as the global theater release... holy cow. If this is the lesson Hollywood takes away from this Kickstarter, everyone wins, man.
I can't believe all of this has only taken a single year. This is amazing stuff.
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Also, just watching Kristen Bell's amazement and glee as the Kickstarter unfolded -- I got so much joy out of that. She seemed so honestly flabbergasted and delighted. :-) I get the sense that the VM cast, much like the Firefly cast and the Friday Night Lights cast, became good friends while working on the show -- and that they're pretty psyched about getting to work together again. \o/
Which, okay, I pat them on their little heads at the idea that fans need an official sandbox to play in, but still: it's a solid tip of the hat to the idea that this universe is about more than just them, and it gives fans who want to go that route a chance to make some money for their fanfic, just like him (at least in theory).
Ahahaha yes -- that was exactly my reaction. Dear Rob: we're already making fanworks for each other, thanks! But it's lovely that you're gesturing in the direction of fanworks having their own kind of legitimacy. Which we already knew, but it's still nice to hear.
In sum: ♥ ♥ ♥
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I admit, I'm probably not going to see it in the theaters, even though there are a few options in the area. I'm just not confident enough that I'll even like it to pay for it a second time. But I'll be streaming/dl'ing it, and man, I hope it does great.
And yes, to all the cast/crew excitement! That's such a crucial component. ♥
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Yeah, I guess my feeling at the time was that if people are willing to spend the money... I mean, I didn't contribute to this, but I can think of series that I'd've thrown more than a ticket's worth of money to in order to get closure. (VM I really never felt the need for closure on; I think this is neat, I want to see the movie, but I thought the ending we got was fine.) I've certainly fantasized about "if we just had a nice billionaire who'd be willing to pay for one more episode..." So on average I'm in favor, though yeah, things could certainly go wrong.
I'd loved first season VM
I have to admit, my memory of VM at this point is mostly "first season awesome, second season... there was a pregnant girl in a coma, and Beaver turned out to be a mass murderer... oh, God, third season was the one with the evil rape-faking feminists, wasn't it?"
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VM had been on my mental "To Watch" list for a long time, but it was the Kickstarter that made me get around to actually watching the show. I was impressed that they would do a Kickstarter in the first place, since it seemed like an unusually awesome thing to do to connect with fans -- and then I was REALLY impressed at the response they got! So I watched it, and holy crap LOVE LOVE LOVE. I can absolutely see why so many people decided to back it, and I'm so glad to hear that the outreach to fans has continued to be so awesome.
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Yeah - VM was such a hard show to explain to people why it was so good, and why they should be watching, but the first season, especially, was one of the best seasons of TV I have ever seen in my life. It was amazing - writing, acting, chemistry, everything. I'm so glad people have been discovering it again thanks to this!
And the movie outreach remains amazing -- we just got an email yesterday saying in effect "we know lots of people aren't happy with having Flixster be the only option for downloading, so if you're having issues, contact Warner customer support and they'll help you find another option - we don't want people to have to pay twice just to get a format they like." Which. The format they originally went with is Warner's proprietary DRM format, UltraViolet, so to get Warner on board with this? Wow.
I have so much love for Rob Thomas and his whole team at this point. ♥ ♥ ♥
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And I am super-excited for the Thursday night advance screening. \o/
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And Rob Thomas did it again yesterday, leaving me just blown away with the "we know not everyone's happy with Flixster and UltraViolet being the platform/format, so you can contact Warner and get other options - we don't want you to have to pay twice". !! WHEN DOES HOLLYWOOD SAY THAT?
I'm so used to being pissed off at things like movies being released in four formats, each with *almost* overlapping extras but each with one thing that none of the others have, so you need to buy all four if you want all the extras, just to squeeze every possible penny out of fans. And this wasn't even something that pissed me off; I'm not keen on flixster or ultraviolet, but whatever, they had to make a choice and the reasoning was sound (identical global release day? Sold! Totally worth it!).
Hearts in my eyes for this team, so much.
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I was so frustrated by S3 of the show, and then so delighted by Thomas's idea for a S4 and truly sad that he never got to pursue that idea; it's been really lovely to see the movie project come together. I found the movie itself to be a delight, though not an unmitigated one, but honestly I am most excited about the possibility that this project could change, even in small ways, some of the big studios' assumptions about fans and audiences and what makes a movie worth making and marketing.