Shadows and Gigabytes:
The History of Fan-Edits of Hollywood Films Cover Image

Shadows and Gigabytes: The History of Fan-Edits of Hollywood Films
Shadows and Gigabytes: The History of Fan-Edits of Hollywood Films

Author(s): Damon Blalack
Subject(s): Fine Arts / Performing Arts
Published by: Universitatea Babeş-Bolyai, Facultatea de Teatru si Televiziune
Keywords: fan-edit; film-remix; Hollywood; YouTube; copyright

Summary/Abstract: Like the technological-advances of the late nineteenth-century, one similar modern effect of emerging technology on artistic-expression concerns the changing question of film adaptation, given the democratisation of filmmaking via new digital media. With sophisticated and affordable software and internet portals such as BitTorrent applications, YouTube, and Vimeo making anyone’s professional-level edits of major film releases freely-accessible by millions, the line defining the original director’s intent becomes muddled. With a coming-age of these fan-edits being many people’s introduction to classic film characters and series, there is a new-level of discourse about the fidelity to not only the very original sources (novels, games, comics, plays), but to the films as they had been originally released in the theatres, on home-formats, or on television.Though many directors have released their own differing cuts of their same-films, notably Ridley Scott, Oliver Stone and George Lucas, it is new-territory to have critics’ cuts, or as many different-cuts of a film as there are audience members. In a nutshell, the film experience is more fluid than it’s ever-been, ever-malleable to suit the unique tastes of the participants.

  • Issue Year: 15/2016
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 48-62
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: English