Capital C


Capital C is a documentary feature film about crowdfunding by directors Jørg Kundinger and Timon Birkhofer. The movie was co-funded by a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter.com and is the world's first feature-length documentary about the topic. German grants FFF Bavaria and DFFF supported the production.

Synopsis

CAPITAL C focuses on the hopes and dreams as well as the fears and pitfalls of independent creators in the wake of the digital age. Over a period of three years, the film follows the endeavors of poker card designer Jackson Robinson, hippie Zach Crain, and video game veteran Brian Fargo, all of whom reach out to the crowd in order to change their lives forever:
Additionally, the movie features interviews of, among others: Seth Godin, Scott Thomas, Felix Salmon, Molly Crabapple, Eric von Hippel, David Weinberger and Steven Dengler

Production

CAPITAL C is an independent production of directors Jørg Kundinger and Timon Birkhofer, which was initially started through a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter in 2012. 586 supporters from 24 countries raised $84,298 for the project. Filming took 3 years in total; way longer than the directors originally anticipated. In the center of the movie are video game legend Brian Fargo, designer Jackson Robinson, and inventor Zach Crain.

Release

The film’s world premiere took place on September 26, 2014 at the Zurich Film Festival.
Other festival screenings include CPH:DOX in Copenhagen, Moscow Urban Forum, and DOK Leipzig as part of their Leipzig Screening. Berlin-based theatrical distributor Farbfilm will bring CAPITAL C on to the big screen in Germany. Simultaneously, publisher Orange Press will release the book to the film, crowdfunding handbook Capital C.

Reception and awards

Zurich Film Festival jury president and Cloud Atlas producer Stefan Arndt awarded the film a special mention during the award ceremony:
“This extremely professionally made documentary film did not only surprise the jury with its liveliness, but even develops a new vision for humanity out of this new way of financing: are there any behavioral forms that are giving capitalism a humanly future?"