Download: DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
High speed download of the DVD image (english) incl. extras. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. Feel free to copy, screen or remix this Free Culture Film!
Download Bikers Soul
4,20 €
or $5.90
DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
Collectors Edition in a Digipak · 63 minutes + 40 minutes extras · audio commentary of the filmmaker · in English, German and Russian
DVD Motorradfilm
11,98 €
or $17
Download: DVD „Route 66”
Gonzo-Documentary, 104 Min · English & German audiotracks · NTSC

High speed download of the DVD image. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. This film is Free Culture: you are free to copy, screen or remix the DVD, even commercially!
Download Route 66
4,20 €
or $5.90
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”
Parking Lot at San Diego International Airport” - the original motion picture soundtrack of one of the first Open Source movies, for which Bechholds had to quit with the traditional European performance rights organization to make this Free Culture movie happening.
CD Route 66 Soundtrack
9,98 €
or $12
CD „Leaving to Nothing”
This album continues the popular seventies psychedelic electronic rock music - with analog synthesizers. If you like Pink Floyd, Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, Tomita, David Parsons, Wendy Carlos or any of the other notables of that era - this is for you.
CD Leaving to Nothing
9,98 €
or $12
DVD-Download „Biker's Soul”
DVD „Biker's Soul”
DVD-Download „Route 66”
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”
CD „Leaving to Nothing”

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Hard Times [en]

…for railway users like me. At least I made my way to Leipzig and back! My train was the only one this morning leaving the station. At lot of other customers I have met were not that lucky. Everybody had to carry some weight and presented it unhesitating to the people willing to listen. Dresden central station was swept almost empty. Nobody seems to be there – Silence, where otherwise it's really noisy at the rush hour. Completely absurd. But more irritating for me was the stoic calmness the Deutsche Bahn customers showed. For a moment I tought the cause for the drop out trains is a natural disaster then the will of the train drivers. I hope this will end soon. :(

Best Regards

Philipp

$1.400 Donation from Nedeos.TV


Nedeos is a video sharing website for clips and films - especially for mobile devices. To support us in the final stage of post-production of "The Last Drug", Nedeos just donated 1.000 Euro! Without doing all the talking, without expecting anything in exchange - just to help. Guys like that are rare! If you are still looking for a website for your video clips where you feel like being in good hands: have a look at Nedeos.TV. I don't know the guys in person, yet, but that donation tells me more about them, that lots of animated banners. We deeply appreciate it!

Interview

Cathrin Günzel questioned me a few months ago about the future of free movies and Creative Commons - following are parts of this interview.

Art does not belong in archives but on the table - "if somebody is remixing or spreading our songs or movies, this means a compliment to us and not a criminal act." so Kluge, "mass criminalization of filesharers to us is nothing but the attempt of big companies to safe the existing dispension of power into the new world. I don't think they will get by with that." VEB FILM Leipzig published their 104 min. movie "Route 66 - an American (bad)Dream" end of 2004 as the first German "Open Source"- feature film as free download for computer and iPod online. Meanwhile, 750.000 copies have been downloaded as well as shared over P2P and 600.000 copies have been spread on DVD. VEB FILM Leipzig reached with "Route 66" over 1,5 million viewers without having been present on the market before.

"Did you decide yet on a license under which the [new] movie will be published?"

I decided to go for the Creative Commons BY-License. This is a little sensation itself. I am not aware of a feature film that has been published under such a liberal license. Shortly an article I wrote will come out where I discuss why this license of all open content licenses is the most suitable for the business model of VEB FILM Leipzig. Despite hardly any artists using it - because it allows for anyboy to earn money with their work.

Why netlabel, why Creative Commons, why so much freedom - whereas on the other hand so many projects online are supposed to create a cash flow?

Recently I visited a virtual 3D online world. Those worlds are really paced fast: After half an hour I was sitting together with a filmmaker from Quebec, a real life-video production teacher and a pioneer of virtual films (a Machinima filmmaker) in his beach house. In front of us was a video screen, we streamed our latest productions after just having met. The next VEB FILM Leipzig movie premiere will take place in such a virtual theater. The guys from Creative Commons are going to support us, they always are up for some crazy stuff, especially if it is related to Free Culture.

The established movie producers tend to build DRM walls around their productions…

Paramount, Disney or Miramax do not have such ideas - this is the world of netlabels. Concerning licenses: we really should no longer put up with the crap that those corporate groups are pulling through. Disney for example got big with filming folk tales which are free of any copyright or license regulations. Some great artwork originated. Now our generation is ready to roll, to create something new on the basis of those creations, and is beaten up by the corporate groups' lawyers.

Sony makes good headphones, but the digital rights management they expect their customers to accept, is evidence of a vision of art neither artists nor art lovers will like. Art does not belong in archives but on the table - if somebody is remixing or spreading our songs or movies, this means a compliment to us and not a criminal act. If you reached this basic understanding as a label, you can start to think about refinancing with respect to this. Not the other way round. The mass criminalization of filesharers to us is nothing but the attempt of big companies to safe the existing dispension of power into the new world. I don't think they will get by with that.

Are you active in the movie business in real life as well or do you have another job?

Many members of our crew have IT- or film background. Our man for digital special effects works fulltime on mainstream productions and sits down with VEB stuff as soon as the sun goes down. Some of us are lucky to be able to work round the clock for the label. That way of course we make progress. The release of our new movie will form a quantum advance because we can set new standards in Free Culture film production. Then we can go down with the cross financing from other projects. The goal certainly is to have a project bear all its costs.

On your website calls for donations and sponsoring are posted - how successfull are those calls to donate money so far? Did you expect more?

The income from "Route 66" made it possible to produce our latest movie. Admittedly under extreme conditions since money was short, but the goal to entertain some millions of people can create some force! We are willing to give a lot, because we are positive that it is the turn of Free Culture on this level in the internet. People will honor that and we will be able to make another movie. This is our plan.

Pretty imporant for our work flow are the many small donations, to be able to cover our running costs and focus on the creative work.

In your shop you sell DVDs, soundtrack CDs and books for a price choosen by the customer - how much do people usually pay voluntarily?

Just under $11 we get per DVD or CD. This is on average twice what people have to spend minimum. It seems to pay to believe in the good in people.

Does free content have a future in the filmbiz?

I assume. Netlabels, podcasters, video bloggers - many who are active online on a high level, publish their work under a Creative Commons license. If the convergence between new and old media keeps going at this pace, it won't take long before this influence of artists is felt by just about anybody.

Anecdote from a Dubbing Session

On very short notice we could convince two pro narrators to read texts for us which later on will form a thread through the movie. This went very chaotic as usual, without fees, but satifying in the end - typically VEB. I thought I share this story with you:

When "Route 66" came out in late 2004, a freelancing journalist contacted me, who did a 3h feature about the Mother Road for Deutschlandfunk radio. Recently I remembered him and asked for a good narrator. He came up with his pal Rolf Becker. Rolf accepted and took on the role of an old scientist. He narrated for us in a Leipzig bedroom since our sound studio was not available (backup: Pro-Tools + top mic - quality was fine). That was right after we shot our last pick ups, so the car was still loaded with boards which Rolf had to hold on to during our trip through Leipzig, he in fact was in town for a shooting for the MDR.
The same day a journalist visited us for a VEB-portrait for Deutschlandfunk Radio Culture. As soon as he got in our car, this jalopy would refuse to start up - a great lead for his story: obviously not only the cars in our movies give us shit, LOL. Anyway, he got us a befriended actor for a narrator: Carsten Wilhelm. So we packed the recordings from Rolf on our FTP server and a few hours later we had two mp3s from Carsten in our inbox. One version fitted perfectly right away so we were able to put it in the Fusion-file of the movie to be shown half a day later. Many thanks and our respect to Carsten Wilhelm and Rolf Becker; by the way, our car is running again.



Rolf Becker gives his voice for the role of Prof. Chomsky in "The Last Drug"


Carsten Wilhelm in the studio narrating the Turing Test Show moderator

Route 66 Screening

Leipzig, Germany: On Friday the 13th at 9 PM the "A Million Dollar Movie Night" begins at the "Kultiviert Anders". You will get short movies, DJs, live acts and "Route 66" - our first movie.

Neuer Sponsor: LEITS

At the end of last year we had continuing trouble with our website. For a netlabel this is like the plaster coming off a wall in a shop. We have been looking for a new hoster ever since. Now yesterday the guys that keep BMW and the city of Leipzig online called and offered the sponsored hosting of our site. That took a load off our mind and the timing is perfect: we can move unhurriedly to the new server before the movie is released. Thanks a bunch to LEITS - Leipzig Internet Technology Service!

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