Aust filmmaker's social media distribution

Independent filmmaker Dean Francis is looking to social media to get his new movie Drown into Australian cinemas.

Mr Francis has distribution deals in America, the UK and Europe but he is using a cinema-on-demand platform, Tugg, instead of the traditional film distribution model to get Drown onto local screens.

"The take-up internationally has been really enthusiastic and fantastic," the Australian director and producer told AAP.

"Here in this country I think there's a sense in which it's quite hard to market a film that is actually as edgy as our film.

"I don't know whether it's just that it's potentially perceived as a gay film, although that's certainly not its only focus, or whether it's that we're just saying something that's maybe a bit uncomfortable for the distributors to feel like they can push to audiences."

Traditionally distributors control what movies are shown on the big screen but with Tugg anyone can act as a distributor by organising a screening at a cinema - provided they get 60 people to pre-buy tickets.

Mr Francis said the film, which explores issues such as gay people in sport and one-punch violence, has gained enormous traction on social media and is doing well using the cinema-on-demand model.

He said the partnering of Tugg, which has been operating in the US for three years, with Australian film distributor Leap Frog Films was a "golden opportunity" for a film like Drown.

Unlike his first feature Road Train, Mr Francis opted to bypass traditional film funding bodies for Drown.

"On this particular project we opted to go down the path of doing this as a very low budget film that would rely on the support of the community both financially and in terms of people actually working on the film for the love of it basically."

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Aust filmmaker's social media distribution

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