What’s changed in the world of film festivals?

29 May '17 25 Comments on What’s changed in the world of film festivals?

Just over a year ago I published a long piece about the huge changes we’ve witnessed in the film festival market over the past fifteen years.  It covered the emergence of online submission service Withoutabox, how the industry fell in love with Withoutabox, how it then fell out love thanks to poor service and monopolistic practices (due to their all-powerful patent) and finally the emergence of a rival, FilmFreeway.

If you’ve not read the piece then I recommend you do now as (a) it’s quite an entertaining, shocking story and (b) it will provide context for today’s article.

A year later, I thought I’d check in and see what’s changed.  I spoke to WithoutaboxFilmFreeway and senior people within major film festivals.  Throughout the article, I have included quotes from the official spokespeople for Withoutabox (see blue sections) and FilmFreeway (in green).  All of the festival staff I spoke to wanted to remain anonymous, which shows how touchy some of these topics are.

I’m going to split this into the good, the bad and the ugly.  Let’s start on a positive note…

The good

I tossed a coin and Withoutabox won, so let’s look at their new features first.

Withoutabox’s improvements and additions

Withoutabox is owned by IMDb, which is in turn owned by Amazon.  Hence it makes sense for Withoutabox to start taking advantage of the technology their parent company has developed.

Festival judges can watch submissions on whatever device they can connect to an Amazon Fire stick, including large home TV screens.  They will gain access to all of the submissions assigned to them, be able to watch them in HD, rate the films and make recommendations of which films should progress to the next judging round – all from within the app.  This data is then accessible in real-time by the festival admins from the Withoutabox site.

One festival using the app is Sundance, and a senior manager at the festival said of it:

Withoutabox’s Festival Judging app is a game-changer for festivals. To pour your heart and soul into a film only to have festivals watch it on a laptop has always been a concern for our applicants. Now we can easily view them on larger screens in HD, which is more in line with how filmmakers want us to experience their work.

A common complaint of Withoutabox in the past was their poor submission system, which appeared to be running on the same basic code created in 2000 when Withoutabox first launched.  Over the past few years, Withoutabox started to address this via a number of improvements, including:

  • A redesigned website with new project pages. Withoutabox calls them “more attractive and easier to evaluate” and they have improved integration with Withoutabox’s HD online screeners.
  • Withoutabox now provides free HD online screeners up to 10Gb (they previously charged filmmakers $2.95 per festival submission)
  • Or filmmakers can choose to submit their film via a Vimeo link.
  • Their festival search function has been enhanced, including filters for deadlines and price.
  • Filmmakers using Withoutabox can automatically create a title page for their film on IMDb.

Withoutabox says of its latest innovations:

[box type=”info wab” style=”rounded” border=”full”]”We have been very focused on continuing to enhance the Withoutabox experience for film festivals and filmmakers, guided by their feedback… In terms of where we are headed in the future, we will continue to listen to and innovate on behalf of our film festival and filmmaker customers” [/box]

FilmFreeway’s improvements and additions

Now let’s turn to the new features on FilmFreeway.

Their biggest innovation over the past year has been the addition of a ticketing system. Festivals can sell tickets to their events from their listings page. The fees for selling a $25 ticket are just $2.24 and the system is free for events which do not charge for admission.  Once attendees have purchased tickets, festivals are able to manage communication and issue digital tickets.  FilmFreeway says:

[box type=”info ff” style=”rounded” border=”full”]”We built the best ticketing solution in the industry and we priced it cheaper than industry leader Eventbrite. It’s only been live a few weeks and it’s already being widely adopted by festivals. Basically, we created a one-stop-shop with everything a festival needs to accept submissions, sell tickets, promote and manage their events, all at the lowest prices in the industry”[/box]

Other recent improvements and additions to the FilmFreeway platform include:

  • New website features such as photos albums, a filmmaker dashboard, a notification centre and advanced search tools.
  • Public profiles and judging forms can now be customised
  • Non-public listings allow your festival to not appear in the search listings and only users with the exact URL can reach the page.
  • Festivals have more control over eligibility, allowing them to refuse submissions that are too long (in either minutes or pages) or because of other factors such as project origin, student status, etc.
  • A ‘Laurel Creation Tool’, which create images of laurels for your festival.

The result of these changes 

Neither company is keen to share private data on the exact number of festivals they host, or the value of their submissions.  However, we can use data from Alexa to get an indication of web traffic.  The top website in the world (currently Google.com) receives a rank of 1.  FilmFreeway seems to be defending its recently-won position as the most popular film festival submission platform, with a rank of 21,037 versus Withoutabox’s 51,193.

However, web traffic is not the only way to judge who’s on top in the battle.  If we focus on the festivals using each platform, there are signs that Withoutabox’s recent efforts are paying off.

Prior to 2014, Withoutabox were the only major submissions platform and so hosted almost all of the world’s major films festivals.  However, once FilmFreeway started to get known, many festivals moved away from Withoutabox (See here for more details on this shift).  Three years after FilmFreeway launched, we’re starting to see big festivals return to Withoutabox.  Not only that, but an increasing number of festivals are exclusive to Withoutabox, including Sundance, Melbourne, Stockholm, Toronto, Hamptons, Santa Barbara, Aspen and Slamdance.

The bad

So far, we’ve addressed the public side of this battle – the changes that are visual to filmmakers.  However, during the course of my research, I have discovered that there’s a darker, secret side to this conflict.  It always seemed strange to me that Amazon was quietly allowing one of its companies to lose market dominance, considering just how aggressively competitive Amazon typically is.  Well, not anymore.

It turns out that Withoutabox are paying some festivals to use their service.  In some cases, very large sums of money.

I have now spoken to a number of people who are right at the coalface of such deals, and I have seen enough documents to be confident it is a major part of Withoutabox’s current strategy.  What I’ve gathered is that a number of major festivals have signed multi-year exclusivity deals with Withoutabox in return for:

  • Cash payments.  This is referred to as “sponsorship”.  All were in the tens of thousands of dollars per year. I am not going to list actual amounts here in case that reveals which festivals shared this info with me.  Taken together, the festivals I spoke to were offered well over half a million dollars.
  • A much lower commission rate.  The standard fee is 8.5% of the amount paid by the filmmakers, but festivals agreeing to an exclusive deal only pay 4%
  • Advertising on IMDb.  Most festivals were each offered over $100,000 of advertising on IMDb.com.
  • Free marketing to filmmakers via Withoutabox, including their “Solo Spotlight Blast Package”, “two-week banner adverts” and “topline mentions”, together worth over $3,000.
  • IMDbPro coverage of the festival. This includes pinning articles to the IMDb homepage during the festival (so long as the article was written by one of the 151 IMDb news desk partners) and coverage in IMDb’s Festival Central section which is pushed out to IMDb’s social feeds (3.6 million followers on Twitter and 7 million on Facebook).
  • Amazon Fire Sticks
  • IMDbPro accounts

I can’t be sure which of Withoutabox’s exclusive festivals received financial inducements to be exclusive, but my guess would be… all of them.  My reasoning for this assumption is thus:

  • Outside of such a deal, there is very little benefit to being exclusive to either platform.  The added work of using two platforms over one is massively outweighed by the increased number of submissions and attention you can expect.  Both systems allow for the easy export of data and so it not hard to mix submissions from different platforms.
  • FilmFreeway is more popular with film festival organisers. In my anonymous survey last year, I asked film festival organisers to rate each platform out of ten:  FilmFreeway received an average of 8.6, while Withoutabox scored just 5.6
  • And with filmmakers. As we saw from the Alexa data, FilmFreeway has the larger number of filmmakers, and in the conversations I’ve had with organisers of festivals that use both platforms, all said that FilmFreeway provided a higher number of submissions, compared to Withoutabox.
  • I’ve not spoken to an exclusive festival that wasn’t paid. Every major festival I was able to connect with which uses Withoutabox exclusively either told me outright (or strongly indicated) that they were receiving financial payments from Withoutabox.  To be clear, I have not managed to connect with every festival, so it’s certainly possible that my research has missed something. But at this stage, this seems unlikely.

I’m not making a case for FilmFreeway, nor suggesting anyone should use it.  I’m just pointing out that it seems implausible that a major festival would voluntarily choose to use just one platform exclusively unless they were induced to do so with a pretty attractive offer.

(Just as an aside, another reason a festival may choose to use one platform exclusively is if they had has a particularly bad experience with the other in the past.  For example, in 2015 HBO used Withoutabox for their HBOAccess Writing Fellowship competition. Unfortunately, the site crashed due to the number of submissions, and so HBO now uses FilmFreeway exclusively. But this is a rare and unusual case).

Everyone involved was very worried about talking openly about these deals, partly because of non-disclosure clauses in the deals and because they fear how Withoutabox may react if they knew they’d spoken out.  I also picked up a hint of shame from a few of them, as it’s clearly not in the best interests of the filmmakers they receive submissions from.  They mentioned how most festivals do not make much money and are run for the community, not for profit.  So when they are offered deals that can dramatically help their bottom line (and therefore increases their chances of surviving for another year) they take them.

I also spoke to festival organisers who were approached and rejected the offer.  Here’s what one such organiser said when I asked if they had been approached by Withoutabox with a financial offer for exclusivity:

They have indeed and we said no. It’s very wrong. [Withoutabox] have no idea about the value of non-exclusivity, and FilmFreeway is now 80% of our income so [Withoutabox] could never afford to replace our income.

I asked spokespeople from each of the two platforms about exclusivity deals. Withoutabox said:

[box type=”info wab” style=”rounded” border=”full”]”As I’m sure you can appreciate, we don’t disclose the details of our business relationships with filmmakers or film festivals. Many festivals, including The Sundance Film Festival and The Toronto International Film Festival, have exclusively relied on Withoutabox to manage their film festival submissions for many years (and continue to do so). We do not share any additional specifics”[/box]

FilmFreeway said:

[box type=”info ff” style=”rounded” border=”full”]”FilmFreeway never requires exclusivity. We believe that we can earn and retain the business of film festivals based on the world-class quality of our product and customer service.  We do offer free marketing and special discounted commission rates for festivals that choose to use FilmFreeway exclusively.  We actually like it when festivals use FilmFreeway in conjunction with Withoutabox because nothing better illustrates the advantages of FilmFreeway when directly contrasted with Withoutabox. Festivals that use both platforms simultaneously report as many as 5 times the entries with FilmFreeway as well as a drastically better experience in ease of use, submission quality, effectiveness of marketing, and customer support”[/box]

The ugly

The battle between Withoutabox and FilmFreeway is getting more intense, so perhaps it’s not surprising that the rhetoric is heating up.  The FilmFreeway team have always been ready to speak their minds and often taunt Withoutabox on Twitter.  Below are just a few of their missives:

And when one of the original founders of Withoutabox (who has since left the business) contacted FilmFreeway, they posted a copy of the email chain.

With this in mind, I’m sure you’re keen to hear what they have to say about the emergence of Withoutabox’s under-the-table deals to festivals.  So was I, and when I asked them, they did not disappoint:

[box type=”info ff” style=”rounded”  border=”full”]”Of course, if you can’t compete by improving your product, I guess your only option is to bribe customers into using your site. The trouble with that strategy is first; it’s completely unsustainable, and second; many festivals are reporting that they receive more than 5 times the submissions via FilmFreeway than they did with Withoutabox. So, fortunately for us, in most cases, even cash bribes aren’t enough to convince them to leave. And when you can’t even pay festivals to come back to your service, you really ought to rethink your entire strategy and whether or you’re offering any value for festivals and submitters, to begin with. The key difference between FilmFreeway and Withoutabox is that FilmFreeway never, ever stops improving. We have added more new features in just the last year, after we were already established as #1, than Withoutabox has in 17 years. In fact, Withoutabox has remained virtually unchanged in all that time. We sometimes wonder if they even care. Unfortunately for them, as we’ve seen with Blockbuster and MySpace, failure to innovate and improve on an ongoing and consistent basis is a recipe for obsolescence and then extinction. The Internet has no mercy for status quo”[/box]

Yikes, fighting talk!

Withoutabox provided much more measured and corporate answers to my questions and declined to discuss the hidden payments and deals.  However, they did say:

[box type=”info wab” style=”rounded”  border=”full”]”While we don’t disclose any details, we are pleased that so many film festivals and filmmakers are continuing to utilize and give us positive feedback on our service. We are proud to work with The Sundance Film Festival, the Toronto International Film Festival, Seattle International Film Festival, Slamdance and many more of the world’s most prestigious established and emerging film festivals”[/box]

So there you have it – a year on from my big breakdown of the battle and things are as heated as ever.

Notes

I’m very grateful to the spokespeople of both Withoutabox and FilmFreeway for their willingness to answer questions on the record.  I’m also indebted to the film festival personnel who spoke to me off the record to let me know what’s happening with their festival.

For the sake of clarity, I should repeat that I have not received any kind of benefit or inducement from any company or festival.  I agreed to give Withoutabox and FilmFreeway advance sight of this article in order to correct errors but I alone have sole control over what I publish.  I am trying hard to retain my neutrality in this increasingly bitter battle!

Epilogue

I suspect this is going to be a story that runs and runs.  After reading my article last year you could be forgiven for thinking that Withoutabox’s owners (IMDb / Amazon) had given up on the platform.  It seems as if no money was being spent on developing the service or the platform and they were simply squeezing out everything they could from their fast-expiring patent.  However, it’s now clear to see that either this was wrong, or that Withoutabox has woken up and is starting to fight for market position.

If you have a view on this situation, then please do leave a comment in the section below.

If you would rather speak to me privately, then please do drop me a line.

Share

Comments

25 comments
  1. While it’s unsettling that these exclusivity deals have not been disclosed until now, I could understand if a festival wanted to limit the number if submissions it received so as to reduce the time, effort, and expense of screening the additional submissions. If they’re receiving hundreds or thousands of submissions from one online submitter, why add more to the pile? It’s not like filmmakers are blocked from using one or the other; they have free choice. Just wish Withoutabox had been upfront about their practices. Good work, Stephens, for exposing the truth.

  2. Excellent article. I’m not surprised Withoutabox has to bribe festivals into using their crappy site. Despicable behavior on their part.

  3. Every filmmaker I know hates Withoutabox. The fact that they are using bribery to hold onto festivals is pathetic but not shocking given their terrible service. Thank you for bringing this to our attention, well done 👏🏼

  4. Bribing festivals? Really? Good thing Withoutabox is owned by Amazon. No chance they could survive on their own. They are simply clueless and their website has one of the most frustrating, worst UX on the internet. I wish they were public so I could short their stock. Keep fighting, FilmFreeway. We’re behind you.

  5. I heard that festivals can see a filmmakers film festival acceptance percentage through Film Freeway.

    Any truth to this?

    1. FilmFreeway Support

      This is Anna from FilmFreeway Support. Festivals can never see your acceptance rate or any information relating to your other submissions on FilmFreeway, ever. Let us know if we can ever help you anytime 🙂

  6. Excellent journalism. Thank you Stephen.

    I work with the IndieCork festival and can confirm what Anna says above. The FilmFreeway system, about which we have only positive things to say, does not reveal any information about success rates of films.

  7. Film Freeway is growing so fast it can end up hurting the films we make. Let me explain. I recently had two films at a festival that were rejected and yes I paid them MONEY. The rejection letter /email COLDLY stated that they had 700 films submitted and only accepted 12… that’s TWELVE folks. WHAT THE FUCK… that is literally throwing my money away. This huge movement toward easy submission on the mass submission process is dangerous cus we film makers are beginning to feel as if we don’t have a chance against such odds. I guarantee I will not be entering many festivals on either withoutabox or Film Freeway next yr. With those odds why the fuck should I. Why don’t you write about this situation as well?!

    1. Maybe you should check the festivals you’re submitting to. You can easily see how many films they select on their website. And I think this is the case for most festivals, we receive around 3000 and only select a 100. Then I don’t even want to mention the Sundance, Tribeca, Berlinale kind of submissions vs selections numbers.

  8. Too bad we are only talking about money here and submissions in large quantities. You would almost forget that the films themselves are important, and the quality of them.

  9. If I can’t find a festival on filmfreeway then I am not submitting. It’s too much hassle switching platforms. Filmfreeway has everything in one place and it’s way easier to use.

    Any festival only on withoutabox is 1. disgusting 2. complicit in ripping off us filmmakers 3. never going to get a penny from me.

  10. While some folks would like for Withoutabox to go away, I think competition is good as having just one platform would end up being a monopoly for Film Freeway and wouldn’t be beneficial to the filmmakers.

    However, I do like the fact that FF has become a good platform and it is continuously improving. I like the export feature where you can download all your submissions and fees etc. It’s good thing when it comes to summing up all your expenses and to understand your acceptance/rejection ratio.

    They also have some marketing features which they sell for a fee which can be great if you have the budget and can afford it. You can enhance your exposure and increase your chances of being selected.

    On the other hand on WB I noticed that the algorithm they use to qualify projects doesn’t always work and their platform is lacking in functionalities.

    Nonetheless, as a filmmaker one of the things I would like to see is something similar to a ‘read receipt” that the festivals looked at my film (short or feature) and not threw it in the recycle bin. (They do receive thousands of movies in a season after all.)

    Right now we have to rely on good faith.

  11. I just want to throw my anecdotal evidence out there, in the hope that other people can share theirs and some data emerges…

    As a filmmaker I much prefer using FilmFreeway over Withoutabox, because the interface is better – not just a little better but a lot better (how hard can it be to remember my billing address WAB?!). But I always check WAB because sometimes the different closing dates introduce some lower fee tiers.

    And something strange I’ve noticed is that comparing our WAB submissions to our FF submissions, our acceptance rate is significantly higher through WAB. So it’s more of a pain to submit, but with the same project and the same EPK materials, we seem to get selected a lot more.

    Does anyone else have any similar (or differing) experience to add?

  12. Ritengo molto interessante tutta questa discussione. Molto interessante anche l’articolo di Stephen, direi che mi ha aperto la mente su un sacco di cose. Ho creato un IFF e l’ho postato su FF, nel 2017. Tutto è andato bene, quelli di FF mi hanno seguito in tutto ed io, con il mio gruppo, abbiamo portato “il nostro piccolo festival del cinema” NEL MONDO. Perché per noi è questo l’importante: far conoscere il nostro Film Festival e guardare film, cortometraggi, documentari, e premiare alla fine chi riteniamo migliori. Quest’anno, 2019, volevo provare con WB, ma visti i presupposti, visto tutto ciò che ho letto qui, penso che rimarrò con FF. Grazie a tutti!

  13. I like the quote of the senior manager of Sundance: “To pour your heart and soul into a film only to have festivals watch it on a laptop has always been a concern for our applicants.” Being able to watch films on better devices than a laptop gives the judges a better viewing experience. I would love to go to the sactown film fest and see how it’s changed and had any upgrades.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stephen Follows