Show HN: Hacker News for film buffs (newyorkdailyinquirer.com)
I tried to replicate the minimal design of hacker news. A small pet project I wanted to do after getting frustrated with the politics and dumb down conversations the film communities have on X/twitter, instagram and other social platforms have. I'll try to update the landing page with more links, feel free to check it out and judge.
50 comments
[ 5.6 ms ] story [ 135 ms ] threadLike any social networks, the key to this website's success would be retention. I hope you find a way to make users come back often.
First, the user who used to make weekly box office analysis decided to stop doing it for free. Good for him/her, but that was a big blow for the subreddit.
Second, once you're long enough you realize how the hype machine is always there. From "leaked" picture to teaser to poster to trailer, all negative comments are met with "you can't judge until you've seen the movie" while positive ones are upvoted to the top. Not the only forum guilty of this, but it turns the subreddit into yet another arm of the movie PR industry.
I guess it's the inevitable end of all forums, so maybe this one will capture the magic that /r/movies lost.
What's the magic?
What does box office performance have to do with quality? Already looks like the subreddit has the wrong focus.
It also adds context to better understand what's at stake for movies based on distributor, producer and genres. When a horror movie costs 2M and a Marvel film 200M, "20M box office" by your favorite director can mean two very different things for their future.
But a Marvel film has nothing to do with quality.
It's fine if you're focusing on the movie business. Just don't confuse the two.
Still, a new community that isn't beholden to Reddit's quirks and whims is always welcome.
I wonder if it would be worth paying some funny people to kick off the discussions by arguing with each other.
My initial take… make it even more minimal. HN is almost spartan to a fault, just a hair above all text. This is objectively a good this.
Get rid of the white space, reduce the font size, remove the boxes around the posts, lose the italics and make the header a quarter of its size and finally stick to one font. That’ll get you closer to the hn aesthetic…
But all of that will be for not if you don’t moderate. All the graphic design (or lack there of) in the world will not replicate hands on thoughtful compassionate human moderation.
Hn is what it is because @dang is who he is. It’s a fine line to walk and biases will reveal themselves in abhorrent ways. Building communities is as much a spiritual journey for the maintainers as it is a never ending drudgery of minutia…
Grab HN's stylesheet https://news.ycombinator.com/news.css?CEh26wiAG7FUlVHVtVAw and maybe look into an even more info-dense landing page like Brutalist Report: https://brutalist.report/
Show HN: The Brutalist Report – A rolling snapshot of the day’s headlines - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30430752 - Feb 2022 (88 comments)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Foster_Kane
I share your frustration with existing online film communities. The problems I notice in online film communities (including the film-specific Letterboxd) are:
- knee-jerk reactions that are paltry in analysis (e.g. "old films are better because they were shot on film" or "how dare you dislike that film")
- churlish reactions getting "likes" in part to its humor, not its content
- comments saying nothing more than "look how beautiful/ugly this is"
A couple of questions:
1) This website may become more valuable if it could attract and retain insightful commenters. Is there any plan to achieve that?
2) What made you focus this website on film news? Are moviegoers more able to comment insightfully on news that is in-the-making?
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[1] This may be the root cause of the decline in the quality of film discussions, like with discussion of many other subjects in our age of social media. Most people do not engage with quality sources, which lowers their expectations for discussions in general. One can still find substantial information in publications that enforce editorial standards, such as trade magazines and journals on film studies.
Furthermore, the communities for film appreciation and film making may behave differently on a film news website. While people who appreciate film can candidly talk about films, people who make films have vested stakes. This can make Filmmakers self-censor their thoughts. (e.g. They don't want to openly criticize a veteran filmmaker, since the veterans might have influence in the younger filmmaker's future production.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemmy_(social_network)