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Posted July 16, 2009 Homepage and Movie Matcher Indiewire
SnagFilms’s redesigned site indicates an attempt to reflect user demands for greater interactivity. A feature called “Movie Matcher” presents various disconnected words or phrases that can be combined as key words, yielding movie recommendations tailored to individual preferences. The new site also contains “Just Viewed,” “Snagged Today” and “Most Popular this Month” features — obvious attempts to drive the popularity of the library’s contents, which will grow significantly in the coming weeks.
SnagFilms’ Movie Matcher a Gift to Movie Lovers
SnagFilms.com is one year old tomorrow, and to celebrate, the website devoted to distributing documentaries online is launching a snazzy redesign and an online film festival.
It’s brilliantly simple and presumes that movie lovers need help thinking of new movies to see. (Which we do— how many hours have you spent wandering the aisles at Blockbuster in vain? Except almost none of us go to Blockbuster anymore?)
Movie Matcher, which goes live on the homepage Friday, lets you decide on films based on what kind of movie you’re in the mood for: light or heavy, inspiring or controversial. You click on those words, and a slot-machine-like counter at the top of the panel quickly scans the site’s 840 documentaries and offers you an array of options.
For example, I clicked on light, inspiring and women.
If I click on one of the films, I get an ad before the movie begins; the films are all free.
The films are supported by interstitial ads; filmmakers make incremental revenues each time their movie is watched. It’s still not evident that this is a distribution platform that allows filmmakers to support themselves, but Snagfilms argues that it is a new revenue stream that is vital in the age of declining options for independent filmmakers.
I say, if it works, fantastic. On that one, the jury is still out.
“It’s a combination of human beings and technology,” said Snagfilms CEO Rick Allen. “We took a look at various ways we had meta-tagged our films, we went through it to figure out how people thought about all this, and decided on each film which tag to use.” The technology involves a complicated algorithm and sophisticated user interface, but the most complex part involved tagging the films., which was done by a handful of Snagfilms folks, from executives down to interns. Personally, I appreciate it. To me, Movie Matcher reflects real thinking about the problem of choosing a movie from the perspective of the movie-goer who constantly wants to find another like the last one they liked, but completely different.
Netflix, like Amazon, has used the approach of if-you-liked-this-you’ll-probably-like that to suggest new movies or books to customers.
Hunch.com does much a similar job, not only for movies but for all kinds of leisure activities or products. But that requires your answering a series of questions before working your way toward a bunch of options. I liked it. But it felt like work. Snagfilms, Matcher made it extremely simple. Thank you. Now can they build a tagged archive one of the thousands of existing feature films too? Happy Birthday, Snagfilms.
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