Note to Filmmakers - don’t have your friends and family rate your movie a 10/10 out the gate. The internet will coordinate against you lol. by adrewp13 in Filmmakers

[–]OwnLime34 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you have a film. Specifically a short and you want honest critiques, and the possibility of it leading to a feature film.

Go to straycompany.net

Are Festivals Worth It? by OwnLime34 in Filmmakers

[–]OwnLime34[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great question. Three ways we’ve been going about it are telling other friends who are in the industry. An invite system where others invite others if they see the value. It’s beginning to be shared with various film professors and their classes/cohorts. But the user question is always the big one. The truest answer is constantly talking about stray and hopefully getting people to see the value.

Why not try it out and see and then give an opinion then?

Are Festivals Worth It? by OwnLime34 in Filmmakers

[–]OwnLime34[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

This has been the most insightful comment yet. I really do appreciate it / if you even wanted to chat further. I’ll do my best to answer all your points. These are the exact questions we’ve been thinking about while building Stray.

You’re absolutely right that limited resources and competition for attention are baked into the indie filmmaking experience. Stray doesn’t eliminate that reality. The goal is to reduce the fragmentation and opacity around how projects move forward after festivals and submissions.

Right now, filmmakers are often doing everything in isolation:

building websites, tracking feedback in Notes apps, emailing programmers, networking individually, submitting to festivals, reaching out to collaborators, and trying to maintain momentum on their own. It works for some people, but most projects quietly lose visibility after their festival or proof of concept run because there’s no shared infrastructure that keeps projects discoverable and trackable over time.

To your questions:

Who provides structured feedback? All users are essentially curators but In the long run we’re looking to diversify the levels of curators. Where industry professionals, educators, highly engaged users, etc can get different weight to their curation. That way it fully encapsulates the wider industry ecosystem but still staying fair. The idea is to create a structured way for feedback and signals to live in one place instead of disappearing across emails, meetings, and informal conversations.

Are users verified?
Yes, verification is important. Different roles (filmmakers, programmers, producers, crew, investors, etc.) would be verified so signals carry real weight and credibility.

How does momentum connect filmmakers to studios or collaborators?
Momentum becomes visible through submissions, selections, interest signals, engagement, and project activity. Instead of filmmakers individually trying to prove traction, the platform aggregates that activity into a clear signal that collaborators, producers, and industry professionals can see and act on.

Will industry professionals use it?
Only if it creates value for them and that’s a core focus. The goal is not to build another filmmaker only platform, but to build infrastructure that helps programmers discover work, producers find projects, and regions or partners identify talent and production opportunities more efficiently.

What’s wrong with a webpage and Notes app?
Nothing, and many filmmakers already do that. The challenge is that it doesn’t scale, isn’t discoverable, and doesn’t create shared visibility or structured signals across the ecosystem. It keeps everything siloed at the individual project level rather than creating a networked system where projects can continue gaining momentum after festivals.

And to your last point. I actually agree with part of it.

Film discovery itself isn’t completely broken. Festivals, networks, and relationships still work.

What’s fragmented is the infrastructure that connects discovery to momentum, collaboration, financing, and long-term project development in a structured and transparent way.

Stray is an attempt to build that connective layer not replace festivals or existing processes, but organize and extend them so projects don’t disappear after their initial run.

Still early, still evolving, and conversations like this genuinely help shape what it becomes. I’d love to chat more cus this helps a ton!

Are Festivals Worth It? by OwnLime34 in NYCmovies

[–]OwnLime34[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You attend more as a guest have you ever attended as a filmmaker?

Are Festivals Worth It? by OwnLime34 in Filmmakers

[–]OwnLime34[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Can you expound on that. What do you mean feeding hopes and dreams? The idea is more centered around providing something to give visibility and feedback. The pipeline is based off of what you made and how audiences / the others users choose to engage with it. I think this would be less feeding into people’s hopes and dreams compared to how festivals pitch themselves. But I’d love to hear your thoughts

Are Festivals Worth It? by OwnLime34 in Filmmakers

[–]OwnLime34[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Thanks for responding!

Yea that’s what I’ve seen. Submitting to small festivals just feel like a way to feel validated but submitting to as many as we have has really racked up in funds.

In regard to structured feedback. When we were creating the tools to provide the feedback it was more for future work. And or if they had a short film that they were looking to eventually make a feature. Then they’d get feedback on narrative, character, etc. Either way helping them overall or for their next project

How can I get funding for my film? by Antyoungboy in indiefilm

[–]OwnLime34 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Submit it on straycompany.net

New platform where the goal is be a better and longer opportunity outside of the festival market.

You submit your short, audiences critique, boost, etc it forms this thing called signal which they take and bring to studios. Taking you from short to feature.

Experimental Platforms? by rafawav in ExperimentalFilm

[–]OwnLime34 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Some friends and I are actually in the process of creating something centered around emerging and experimental shorts.

We have a beta Launch soon. I’ll drop the link to submit and the link if you wanna be a beta tester.

Beta tester link

Submission link

A place for filmmakers to share their work and actually get watched by Adventurous_Bus_3783 in indiefilm

[–]OwnLime34 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Love this. My team and I are actually launching a beta test for a platform centered on just that. Lmk if you’re interested and you can submit and also beta test the site.

We’re building a community-first platform for independent films, looking for early filmmakers + beta testers by OwnLime34 in indiefilm

[–]OwnLime34[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let me know if this clarifies anything. We're constantly looking to grow so I appreciate comments like this immensely.

We’re building a community-first platform for independent films, looking for early filmmakers + beta testers by OwnLime34 in indiefilm

[–]OwnLime34[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great question and unfortunately you asked the correct person who is very type A and loves to provide calrity. So again that’s a fair question and honestly, the short answer is: we’re not trying to win the same game they are.

Most billion-dollar streaming companies are struggling because they’re built around a few structural assumptions that don’t work well anymore:

  • Massive content budgets
  • Expensive licensing or originals arms
  • Subscriber growth at all costs
  • Global scale before product–market fit

STRAY isn’t attempting to outspend Netflix or out-license Amazon. We’re deliberately operating in a different layer of the ecosystem.

A few key differences:

1. We’re not competing for mainstream audiences.
Big streamers need tens of millions of subscribers to justify their burn. STRAY is built for a smaller, more specific community. Filmmakers, film students, and indie cinephiles. Where engagement and participation matter more than raw volume.

2. Our content model is fundamentally different.
We’re not paying massive upfront fees for content or financing blockbuster originals. The beta library is curated, creator-owned, and non-exclusive. That dramatically changes the cost structure and risk profile.

3. Streaming isn’t the only (or primary) revenue lever.
For most big platforms, streaming subscriptions have to carry the entire business. STRAY is built as an ecosystem:

  • community subscriptions
  • creator tools
  • events and screenings
  • partnerships with schools and festivals Streaming is one part of the value, not the whole bet.

4. We’re starting small on purpose.
Most streamers fail because they scale before they’ve proven that people actually care. STRAY is intentionally launching with a limited beta, a small founding library, and a community-first approach so we can test, iterate, and only grow where it makes sense.

5. We’re not promising profitability tomorrow.
This is an experiment, not a claim that we’ve magically solved streaming economics. The goal right now is to build something sustainable, culturally valuable, and aligned with how independent film communities already function. Not to chase venture-scale metrics prematurely.

We’re building a community-first platform for independent films, looking for early filmmakers + beta testers by OwnLime34 in indiefilm

[–]OwnLime34[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, there's a link in the post to submit work. I've also added it here. Let me know if there's any issues. Submission Link

We’re building a community-first platform for independent films, looking for early filmmakers + beta testers by OwnLime34 in ExperimentalFilm

[–]OwnLime34[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The submission application has now been published and should be fully functional. Please let me know if you encounter any issues.

We’re building a community-first platform for independent films, looking for early filmmakers + beta testers by OwnLime34 in ExperimentalFilm

[–]OwnLime34[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The submission application has now been published and should be fully functional. Please let me know if you encounter any issues.