The app, a video-based social media platform seemingly similar to Snapchat and TikTok, allows its users to create live content and connect with other people through mobile devices. Per the release, the company started offering early access to the BitTorrent Live streaming service today.
Vimeo, iTunes and Google Play will also distribute the film.Tron ( TRX)-owned peer-to-peer ( p2p) software company BitTorrent announced that it will release the public beta version of its decentralized social media app BitTorrent Live in Q2 2019 in a press release on March 27.
HITS will also have a more traditional release in theaters in New York, Los Angeles. I just want as many people to have access to this film as possible,” Cross said. Cross made his $100,000 fundraising goal three weeks early by offering to do things like become the godfather of your child for $3,500 or invite you as his personal guest at his next comedy show for $2,000.
Hopefully this is the first domino in paving the way for other filmmakers to get their films directly into the hands of fans instead,” Cross told TechCrunch over the phone.įans of the film will also be able to pay whatever they want to see the film in 50 select movie theaters throughout the United States and Canada at the film’s debut this Thursday, thanks to a somewhat zany Kickstarter campaign. “I spent a lot of time thinking about a better way to get this film out there. Sony’s promotional Bundle for the Soviet Union documentary Red Army has generated over 2 million downloads and there have been over 4.5 million downloads to date for Thom Yorke’s ‘On Tomorrow’s Modern Boxes,’ according to BitTorrent. It’s also the first to offer up a pay-what-you-want model on Bittorrent.īitTorrent has experimented with other forms of entertainment distribution in the recent past. HITS is the first feature-length film to be released as a BitTorrent Bundle.
Why are we then asking them to pay again?”īitTorrent was set to release “The Interview” via a BitTorrent Bundle but the film about the assassination of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un was not distributed this way in the end. “But we thought this was more appropriate because we are asking people to pay for something they may have already paid for on Kickstarter. We’re following in the steps of people like Thom Yorke and Louis CK,” said Cross. “The pay-what-you-want part isn’t something new. For him, it actually reinforced what his film was saying about what talent is really worth. Cross liked the idea and agreed this was the solution.
People could easily, legally, download the film for free this way. This could eliminate the need to pirate a copy. “So we thought, okay, let’s give it to people at whatever price they want to pay,” said Andrews. That’s where the pay-what-you-want idea came in.
The team wasn’t sure people would actually pay anything if they could just pirate a download somewhere online. There was some initial pushback about going with BitTorrent. “Twelve hours later she presented a deck that was 30 pages deep and more considered and robust than what more traditional distributors had provided,” said Andrews. A little bit of chit-chat about the film and about what BitTorrent was doing and Schreder had successfully planted the idea to make HITS a Bundle release instead. It wasn’t until he ran into BitTorrent’s content director Straith Schreder at a Sundance party that he figured out what that was. The film starring Meredith Hagner, Matt Walsh, James Adomian, Jake Cherry, Derek Waters, Wyatt Cenac, David Koechner, Jessie Ennis, Amy Sedaris, Michael Cera, Amy Carlson and Jason Ritter tells the story of a municipal worker named Dave who turns his town upside down when his rants about potholes get put up on YouTube and go viral.Īndrews felt the film deserved something different. “The idea that HITS was going to go through the sausage factory for independent film distribution didn’t fit with the type of film David had made.” “You know the sort of thing a poster, a trailer, ten cities, some New York Times ads and then VOD simultaneously or shortly thereafter,” explained the film’s producer Giles Andrews. He’s letting the public pay whatever they want to download it on BitTorrent for the first two weeks, starting this Friday, February 13.īut is this really the best way to distribute something that the film’s producers have worked so hard on?Ĭross and his producers said they already had plenty of offers at the film’s Sundance premiere in 2014, but that most of them were from the same old “cookie-cutter” distribution proposals. Actor David Cross is foregoing the usual indie film distribution model for his darkly satirical film HITS.