Withoutabox

Withoutabox was a website founded in January 2000 by David Straus, Joe Neulight and Charles Neulight which allowed independent filmmakers to self-distribute their films. The first product launched was the International Film Festival Submission system. Withoutabox worked with film festivals and filmmakers all over the world. In January 2008, Withoutabox was acquired by IMDb, a subsidiary of Amazon.[2][3]

Withoutabox
Type of site
Film
Available inEnglish
OwnerIMDb
Created byDavid Straus, Joe Neulight
URLwww.withoutabox.com
Alexa rank 44,044 (April 2014)[1]
LaunchedJanuary 2000
Current statusNot Active

The Withoutabox website offered filmmakers a platform to search over 3000 film festivals on five continents and to submit their films to over 850 film festivals worldwide, including festivals such as Sundance and the Toronto International Film Festival.[4][5]

Festivals could request submissions via the web and manage incoming submissions electronically, instead of the traditional route of sending in screener DVDs via mail. This allowed festivals to market their event to over 400,000 active filmmakers already on the Withoutabox platform, accept submission fees from them electronically, and automatically notify filmmakers for acceptance into their event. Other services included: streaming on the Internet via IMDb, and selling DVDs and video-on-demand downloads on Amazon.com via CreateSpace.[6][7]

As of October 30th, 2019, the website is no longer in service. [8][9]

Controversy

Withoutabox has attracted criticism in the years following its takeover in 2008 by IMDB, owned in turn by Amazon. Some filmmakers and festivals alike have accused the company of excessive charges, uncompetitive practices, outdated technology and the usual claims of aggressive litigation leveled at Amazon.[10][11][12]

Partners (partial list)

gollark: In a few years I think it'll be back on dedicated accelerator cards anyway.
gollark: Nvidia added real-time raytracing stuff to distract from the lack of significant generational price/performance improvement (because of poor competition in the market), and machine learning stuff for some reason, and then hyped them so much that they threw out stuff like "sanity" and "consistent branding".
gollark: AMD's got a 5700 XT "Anniversary Edition", though...
gollark: Nvidia's done it stupidly *too*! It goes GTX 9x0 (Ti) → GTX 10x0 (Ti) → RTX 20x0 (Ti) + GTX 16x0 (Ti) (in the same generation) → now some of them have "Super" variants for some reason and some are being replaced by the super versions but some aren't.
gollark: The prices seem to be weirdly shifted in Australia.

References

  1. "Withoutabox.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2014-04-01.
  2. Bizjournals.com
  3. Independent Magazine
  4. Indiewire.com
  5. Allbusiness.com
  6. Brooks, Brian (December 3, 2009). "Withoutabox Unveils "Secure" for "Safe" Online Festival Submissions". Indiewire.com.
  7. "Withoutabox Acquires Film Finders; Embarks on Relationship with Rightsline". Indiewire.com. July 13, 2006.
  8. "Withoutabox". www.withoutabox.com. Retrieved 2019-11-01.
  9. O'Falt, Chris; O'Falt, Chris (2018-10-22). "FilmFreeway Defeated Amazon's Withoutabox Monopoly, and Film Festival Submissions Will Never Be the Same". IndieWire. Retrieved 2019-11-01.
  10. 10th Nov, 2008 (2008-11-10). "With or Withoutabox - Independent, November 2008". www.independent-magazine.org/. Retrieved 2008-11-10.
  11. Kaufman, Anthony, ["Why Withoutabox Has 400,000 Indie Filmmakers, 1,000 Film Festivals -- and Frustrated Customers"], May 3, 2012, Indiewire.com
  12. Swanson. Jen, "With or Withoutabox?", November 10, 2008, Independent Magazine (note this 2008 article pre-dates substantial newer developments noted in other articles).
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