An influential social-media website for arthouse aficionados, Letterboxd, is hitting its stride, reaching 17 million active members with accounts at end of last year. “In 2024, those members wrote 96.4 million reviews, marked 701 million films watched, and made 6.8 million lists, a popular feature,” a Letterboxd press release says.
Fans are scattered for upmarket films, which range from major-studio blockbuster “Dune: Part Two,” to indie fare such Brazilian family/political drama “I’m Still Here” and the very goofy, micro-budgeted “Hundreds of Beavers.” So, Letterboxd’s ability to aggregate diverse wings of arthouse audiences makes it valuable for creating film awareness, and also as a media advertising and promotion buy for film marketers.
“As always, saw our members embrace countless classic films and underseen gems alongside new releases, devouring them at sold-out repertory screenings, on physical media and streamers,” Letterboxd CEO Matthew Buchanan said in a statement.
Letterboxd is a media platform aggregating a website with polished film info, comments from readers, podcasts, videos and newsletters. Users create free accounts. Users are encouraged to post and comment, which creates an interactive social media vibes. Opinions are counted and announced, providing pointers on movies to everyone.
Film distributor A24 credited Letterboxd last month with helping “Brutalist” make a strong cinema premiere for a specialty film. “The majority of audiences were under 35 and almost half heard about the film via Letterboxd as the online film-centric social network continues to be a defining force for indie word-of-mouth in the post-Covid era,” wrote Jill Goldsmith for trade publication Deadline.com last month. Since then, the drama starring Adrien Brody has rolled up pre-Oscar awards, including winning as the best picture drama at the Golden Globes a few days ago.
“Specialty” distribution is a subset for the movie business dominated by major-studio films. Specialty films are lower budget (than major studio fare) and aimed for niche audience, whether arthouse appealing to sophisticates, kids, horror/slasher, documentary or foreign language. Historically, specialty films account for 5-10% of domestic cinema boxoffice.
The Letterboxd name is a contraction of the word “letterboxed,” which describes the widescreen visual presentation often favored by cinephiles. The website was founded in New Zealand in 2012 by tech entrepreneurs Buchanan and Karl von Rando.
Competitors in the online media space focused on consumers for arty, upmarket films include IndieWire, Filmmaker Magazine and trade group Film Independent. Other indie-focused digital platforms exist for filmmakers with how-to information.
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