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B-Side is proud to announce the first premiere of a feature film on Hulu - David Modigliani’s timely documentary Crawford. After it’s debut, Crawford spent 7 days straight as the #1 feature film on Hulu. Watch it today for FREE.
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B-Side and the Alamo Drafthouse have teamed up again
for Fantastic Fest 2008. But this year, we’ve got something
new in store. Starting midnight on September 14th, watch
5 features and 5 shorts from the festival in hi-def
streaming with Fantastic Fest Online.
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B-Side on IFC: This month’s CHOICE INDIES film SPLIT: A Divided America premieres Sunday, September 7th at noon. B-Side CHOICE INDIES are now available on the IFC movies, uncut
store on iTunes.
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B-Side’s Roll
Your Own Screening program puts movie exhibition in the hands of fans.
B-Side recently marketed the hilarious Red Envelope/Netflix doc
Super High Me,
premiering at 1,076 screening events in 850 cities. This was the widest single day
opening for a doc ever - on a budget less than a 2" ad in the NY Times.
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B-Side runs the websites for over 200 international film festivals. And B-Side’s
Festival Audience Network connects millions of audience members with
thousands of great films - along with ratings, reviews, and recommendations.
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| Discover the top-rated and most talked-about films at B-Side. Want more? Get all the buzz here. |
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Highest Rated Films
Most Visited Films
Most Reviewed Films
Our good friends over at the Alamo Drafthouse run one of the best festivals anywhere. And we’re not the only ones who think so - Variety called Fantastic Fest “Geek Telluride,” and also named it one of the “10 Festivals We Love”. In previous years, Fantastic Fest has hosted surprise premieres for such films as “There Will Be Blood,” “Apocalypto,” and “Pan’s Labyrinth.”
As great as Fantastic Fest is, this year it just got a little better. We are all atremble here at B-Side with excitement over the launch of Fantastic Fest Online. In partnership with sponsor AMD, B-Side is streaming 10 films from Fantastic Fest 2008 from Saturday, 9/14 through Saturday 9/20 at http://fantasticfestonline.bside.com - absolutely free. And we’re not talking festival rejects - these 10 films are all official selections to Fantastic Fest that were hand-picked to represent the festival worldwide.
Audience members who watch films online are eligible to vote for the ‘Online Audience Favorite’ awards, which will be presented to the winning feature and short film on Monday, September 22 as part of the official 2008 Fantastic Fest awards ceremony. Co-sponsor AMD will be providing cash and technology prizes for the winning films.
In their official announcement, Alamo founder and Fantastic Fest director Tim League explained the motivation behind FF Online:
As 2008 Fantastic Fest badges are sold out and some folks don’t have the money to travel to Austin for the festival in the first place, we have teamed up with two of our festival sponsors, AMD and B-Side, to give everyone a taste of the fun for free.
I am personally very excited to be working with these filmmakers, B-Side and AMD to provide this unique new experience for genre film enthusiasts across the globe. Utilizing technology to provide simple and free access to great new film talent, Fantastic Fest Online may very well be paving the way to redefining what the term ‘film festival’ means in the future.
We are thrilled to be working with Fantastic Fest for the 3rd year in a row, and are excited to be helping them pave the way.
Check out the list of films and watch now: http://fantasticfestonline.bside.com/2008/films
Questions about how to use Fantastic Fest Online: http://www.bside.com/help/ffonline
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© B-Side Entertainment, Inc., by Chris Hyams for B-Side - The audience is never wrong, 2008.
Want more on these topics ? Browse the archive of posts filed under Online, Alamo, Festivals.
In late September Craig Downing will unveil the inaugural Couch Fest Films, a “cozy shorts film fest” hosted by local homeowners in Seattle. Lucky attendees will be able to stroll from one house to the next, taking in a 30-minute program of shorts at each venue. If you visit every venue, by the end of the day you’ll have seen about 200 films at 15 different houses.
I put a battery of questions to Mr. Downing, hoping to learn more about his inspiration and goals for Couch Fest, and I wasn’t disappointed.
What’s your background in film festivals?
I guess it all started when I pulled the trigger on a super 8 camera only to realize that I had accidently and instantly become a filmmaker. It was such a simple, powerful act and I was hooked. From here, I started working as a volunteer for a couple of super 8 film fests around Austin, Texas. One year, SXSW requested the public to make super 8 trailers for their film fest. Seeing my $15 super 8 SXSW trailer play on a 70 foot screen before films was quite a pivotal moment for me. The following year, I was a screener for SXSW. So, for a while there, I had Jenga stacks of VHS tapes in my living room to review. After I moved to Seattle, I resumed making films and connecting to the film community by teaching at the Northwest Film Forum and volunteering at the Seattle International Film Fest. I still go manic during the Seattle film fest trying to see too many Icelandic films all while surviving on Butterfinger candy bars and Capri-suns.
What was the inspiration for Couch Fest?
Honestly, I don’t remember a specific epiphany that produced the idea for Couch Fest Films. Though, I am pretty sure I could have come up with the idea during a crappy job. I have discovered that the crappier the job is for me the harder I daydream. I suspect that the idea of Couch Fest Films came from some deep crappy-job daydreaming. I do know that I have been toying with the idea of actually following through with this film fest for a while. On a personal level, I’ve been thinking about going to graduate school again but, I kind of decided to just save the money and just produce what I wanted to be doing later–but now. I mean, I don’t think currently there is an available internship where a candidate can run a film fest. So, well, I kind of decided to just create that internship myself and then conveniently select me to fill that position. In the end, though, I really just like movies. I like sitting my rump on a good couch. I also like riding my bike to my friends’ houses. So, I figured this Couch Fest Films idea would be a good way to combine all of these elements.
How did you settle on the format? 200 films spread into themes across 15 houses seems awfully specific.
This is a good point. The reality is that the number of themes and number of houses will really be determined by the diversity of the films that smart-thinking filmmakers submit to Couch Fest Films. The goal is to have each house have its own theme for the program that is played at the house. But, if we receive, for example, an overwhelming amount of really great erotic sci-fi films, well, then we may decide to have two houses with this classic film theme.
Do you have your house venues locked down yet?
No, we don’t have all 15 houses yet. Do you have a couch, a TV and a DVD player, Chris? If so, I can sign you up. As of now, we have five houses that are signed up to host. We won’t be able to determine the overall map until we see what houses we have available. I really wanted to have houses spread over the city in all of the different neighborhoods. But, I also want the houses close enough that forward thinking film fest attendees wouldn’t feel rushed to make it to the next house on time.
I am asking residents to open their houses to other lovers of film who happen to also be strangers. This is kind of one of the goals of the fest. I want to see what happens in the community if people start opening up their living rooms in different parts of the city in order to come together to share the excitement of film. I’m aware that this idea is a little cheesy . . . but it would be too easy to just have my friends that live on my street open their houses for this film fest. The goal of Couch Fest Films is to have houses in neighborhoods that we wouldn’t normally think about going to visit. Let alone, walk into a stranger’s house and sit on their couch and watch a film. And, on the flip side, let’s not forget that houses in all different neighborhoods are opening their doors to their living room to complete strangers too. This will hopefully create new relationships, friendships and experiences. I don’t know…maybe I was getting a little a head of myself there. But, that’s the community goal and I am excited to put the pieces next to each other.
I will visit each location before signing them up to host. I will do this mainly to say hello to interested residents but to also confirm that they can accommodate 15 – 20 people in their house.
Why should a filmmaker submit to Couch Fest Films?
Who wouldn’t want to win the Golden Couch award? Actually, I have been thinking about this. I have obviously looked online and discovered there are so many film fests out there. This wasn’t really a surprise but, I was excited to read about all the different and unique themes. I am hoping that my idea is maybe clever, silly or different enough to draw filmmakers to be a part of this community film fest. Of course, having no submission fees for the chance at $1750 in prize money can’t hurt either.
Filmmakers with short films that are under 5 minutes can submit to Couch Fest Films by August 15th, 2008. There is no submission fee.
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© B-Side Entertainment, Inc., by Chris Holland for B-Side - The audience is never wrong, 2008.
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You do iTunes? B-Side does… and now our Choice Indies titles are available as part of the IFC, Movies Uncut iTunes channel.

Now on iTunes - B-Side Groundswell™ alum and music industry expose “Before the Music Dies” combines performance footage, industry insight, and humor to document the current mess that is popular music. Filled with interviews by well-respected talking heads like original riot grrrl Jenny Toomey and New York Times critic Jon Pareles, the movie does what all good documentaries should do — elicit dialog and (hopefully) action.

Also available on iTunes is the suspense drama “The Cassidy Kids” that weaves a clever tale of murder, memory, and Saturday morning television. It features “30 Rock” resident nerd-bot Judah Friedlander and 80’s sitcom star Kadeem Hardison — who’s seen a career spark since his “A Different World” days with “Bratz: The Movie” and “Made of Honor” co-starring that McDreamy dude. Yes!
Finally, look for B-Side beer and bro-fest doc, (and Choice Indies grad) “The Outdoorsmen: Blood, Sweat, and Beers” on iTunes later this month.
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© B-Side Entertainment, Inc., by Steph Layton for B-Side - The audience is never wrong, 2008.
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wideyefilms added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/19/09 8:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
undeadforever added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/22/09 12:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
tiffanybartok added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/19/09 8:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
undeadforever added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/19/09 8:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
LaWeltz added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/22/09 12:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
LaWeltz added Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Undead (screening: 1/19/09 8:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
boxSlam added Graphic Sexual Horror (screening: 1/18/09 8:00 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
hilaryk added Lost Sparrow (screening: 1/16/09 12:30 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
hilaryk added Road to Fallujah (screening: 1/19/09 8:00 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009
hilaryk added Road to Fallujah (screening: 1/17/09 8:00 PM) to his/her calendar
at: Slamdance Film Festival 2009