I disagree based on the lack of my generation's (millennial) John Waters. Or Maya Deren.
John Water's ideal was to flip an idea into a movie in an afternoon. With the prevelance of RED, iPhones, Canon 5Ds, and a few hundred metric tons of mid-2000's mini DV cameras, this has not happened. We're instead moving into a post-commercial era, where we're doing 30 second youtube spots, and watching full-budget long-form.
Infinite manufacturing will result in a neighborhood Shapeways or Kickstarter, not a neighborhood Ford.
I very strongly believe that it has happened. Actually, I know that it has.
There are people out there using the technology to make very good films on very low budgets.
The problem isn't getting the films made, and it's not distributing them. It's in connecting the viewers to the films. "Marketing" in the past has been the way that's been done. But we need something else now, a new method of film discovery.
Good stuff is going completely unseen, and that's a real shame.
Actually looking at the software market, infinite manufacturing would result in a small few creating a neighborhood Ferrari because it suits their admittedly niche interests.
Ah! Point taken. Although I've been giving some thought to local automobile production, actually - Richmond (IN) used to make cars and I think we should again. The only problem is it's damned hard to get one certified nowadays.
John Water's ideal was to flip an idea into a movie in an afternoon. With the prevelance of RED, iPhones, Canon 5Ds, and a few hundred metric tons of mid-2000's mini DV cameras, this has not happened. We're instead moving into a post-commercial era, where we're doing 30 second youtube spots, and watching full-budget long-form.
Infinite manufacturing will result in a neighborhood Shapeways or Kickstarter, not a neighborhood Ford.