But maybe it shouldn't all be free. I, like all my film friends, are looking for a model of survival, no longer success. Reading Steve Brill's defense of micro-payments makes me wonder if there is anything that film fans and workers are really committed to paying for. Variety & Hollywood Reporter start to feel like real luxuries these days. Guilds and unions, like membership in IFP and Film Independent, are crucial in the same way that if you want a vaccine to work, virtually everyone has to partake -- but my son still screams with every shot (maybe if vaccines had a networking attribute like these organizations my son would respond better...).
But what will we pay for? My Netflix subscription seems like a better value with each new film that is available for streaming, even if I still prefer DVDs. As they just hit 10 Million subscribers it seems that everyone will pay for access to every film. As a devourer of new international film, I need a festival diet of projected new work from around the world every two or three months. It's one of the reasons I can never leave NY. Jaman may offer it online but I need to see it large in a room full of people. And as much as I like to see it, I like to talk about it, read about it. So what will I pay for? I honestly don't know.
Anyway, read Brill's suggestion, and ponder the applicability to our world of film. I am.
No comments:
Post a Comment