A 'fan film' is a
film or
video inspired by a
film,
television program,
comic book or a similar source, created by
fans rather than by the source's copyright holders or creators. Fan filmmakers have traditionally been
amateurs, but some of the more notable films have actually been produced by professional filmmakers as film school class projects or as demonstration reels. Fan films vary tremendously in quality, as well as in ''length'', from short faux-teaser trailers for non-existent motion pictures to rarer full-length motion pictures.
History
The technology required to make fan films was a limiting factor until relatively recently. In the 1960s UCLA film student
Don Glut filmed a series of short black and white "underground films", based on adventure and comic book characters from 1940s and 1950s motion picture serials. Around the same time, artist
Andy Warhol produced a film called ''
Batman Dracula'' which could be described as a fan film. But it wasn't until the 1970s that the popularization of
science fiction conventions allowed fans to show their films to the wider fan community.
Most of the more prominent science fiction films and television shows, such as ,
Star Trek,
''Doctor Who'',
''Buffy'' and
''Angel'' are represented in fan films. Because fan films generally utilize characters and storylines
copyrighted and
trademarked by the original filmmakers, they are rarely distributed commercially for legal reasons. They are exhibited by various other methods, including showings at
comic book and science fiction conventions, and distribution as homemade videos, ranging from
VHS videocassettes to
CD-ROMs and
DVDs.
Due to the rise of the
Internet, more and more fan films are being made available online.
FanFilms.net provides a general overview, whereas many examples of fan films can be found on dedicated websites such as
TheForce.net, which hosts many ''
Star Wars'' fan films, as well as
BatmanFanFilms.com which hosts dozens of ''
Batman'' related fan films, trailers, teasers and screenplays. Many comic book or "super-hero" related fan films are also listed by such sites as
Comics2Film.com, and
iFilm. There are also many James Bond fan films scattered around Commanderbond.net,
MI6.co.uk,
Youtube and others.
Some fan film productions achieve significant quantity and or quality. For instance, the Star Trek
Hidden Frontier series has sofar produced 49 episodes over 7 seasons - compared to only 34 episodes for well-known sci-fi series
Battlestar Galactica (1978) and
Galactica (1980) ''combined''.
, a Finnish feature-length spoof of both Trek and Babylon 5, has attracted some 3.5 - 4 million downloads, making it possibly the most successful Finnish movie-production to date.
Authorized fan films
Until relatively recently, fan films operated under the radar of the commercial operations, but the explosion of fan productions brought about by affordable consumer equipment and animation programs, along with the ease of distribution created by the Internet has prompted several studios to create official policies and programs regarding their existence.
The highest profile of these programs has been
Lucasfilm's
Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards, which permits only
documentary,
mockumentary, and
parody entries, while prohibiting serious
fan fiction. Lucasfilm's limited support and sanction of fan creations is a marked contrast to the attitudes of many other copyright holders. Some owners, such as
Paramount Pictures with
Star Trek, or
DC Comics with
Batman and
Superman, have been known to actively discourage the creation of such works by fans, or take action to prevent their exhibition.
Unlike many American TV shows, the British series ''
Doctor Who'' allowed its writers to retain the rights to characters and plot elements that they created - most famously with
Terry Nation's
Daleks. While the BBC has never licensed the character of
the Doctor for use in fan films, a number of the writers have consented to allow the monsters and supporting characters they created to be used in direct-to-video productions (see
Doctor Who spin-offs).
The creators of ''
Red Dwarf'' sponsored a fan film contest of their own in 2005, with a fairly wide remit ranging from fictional stories set in the ''Red Dwarf'' universe to documentaries about the show and its fandom. The two winning shorts were a spoof documentary charting attempts to find funding for a ''Red Dwarf'' movie, and an animated short "episode" of the show. These two films were featured in their entirety as bonus features on the Series VII DVD release in November 2005, along with a montage of clips from the runner-up entries. This made them among the first fan films to be commercially released by a property's original creators.
See also
★
The Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards
★ for the Wikipedia category of fan produced ''Star Wars'' spin-offs.
★
Star Trek fan productions for details of Star Trek related fan series.
★
Doctor Who spin-offs for details about ''Doctor Who'' spin-offs that use characters and races from the television series.
★
Buffyverse fan films
Further reading
★ ''Wired'' News:
A Wretched Hive of Fan Films - on the development of fan films
★ ''The Weekly Standard'':
The Fan Films Strike Back
★
I Was A Teenage Movie Maker - the official Don Glut homepage
★
The story of ''Raiders of the Lost Ark: The Adaptation'', a shot-for-shot remake of ''
Raiders of the Lost Ark'' filmed by three teenagers over a period of seven years
External links
:''For an impression of the extensiveness of the fanfilm phenomenon, as well as a comprehensive list - see
www.FanFilms.net''
''Doctor Who''
★
The ''Doctor Who'' Fan Film Database
"Green Arrow"
★
Green Arrow Fan Film
''Indiana Jones''
★
Indiana Jones fanfilm listing at TheRaider.net
''Red Dwarf''
★
Ganymede & Titan - Home of official ''Red Dwarf'' Fan Film Competition winner
''Star Wars''
★
FanFilms.com - ''Star Wars'' and other genre fanfilms hosted at TheForce.Net
★
AtomFilms - Home of
The Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards
★
FanFilmsForum.com - Online forum dedicated to the creation and discussion of fan films
''Superheroes''
★
BatmanFanFilms.com - Batman related fan films
★
Comics2Film Cinema - Superhero related fanfilms