Factory 25
Factory 25 is a Brooklyn-based independent film distribution and production company, founded by Matt Grady in 2009.
History[]
Grady founded Factory 25 in 2009 after leaving a position as director of production at Plexifilm.[1] The name Factory 25 is from "the manufacturing home of the famous 1909 Honus Wagner tobacco card".[2]
The company's first release, Frownland,[3] was the film that inspired Grady to create his own distribution company, as he believed no other company would distribute the film.[4]
As of 2010, Grady remained the company's sole employee.[5]
Releases[]
The films that Factory 25 produces and distributes are often microbudget features with nontraditional narratives. Factory 25 largely focuses on physical releases such as DVDs, Blu-Rays, VHS Tapes, CDs and Vinyl LPs. As of 2010, a typical production run consisted of 1,000 DVD-LP pairs (movie and soundtrack), where sale of 40% of the production run would be the break-even point.[5] The company's physical releases often include objects such as 16mm film strips, drawings and written essays.[6] Matt Grady has expressed a desire to make the company's physical releases collectible and appealing, "like a fetish item".[7] The company has worked and distributed films alongside notable distribution companies such as Oscilloscope Laboratories and streaming services such as Fandor.[8][9]
Filmography[]
Distributed By Factory 25:
Title | Year | Director |
---|---|---|
Hero | 1983 | Alexandre Rockwell |
In the Soup[10] | 1992 | Alexandre Rockwell |
Dutch Harbor - Where the Sea Breaks Its Back | 1998 | Braden King and |
Funny Ha Ha | 2002 | Andrew Bujalski |
2005 | ||
We Go Way Back | 2006 | Lynn Shelton |
You Weren't There | 2007 | and |
Frownland[11][12] | 2007 | Ronald Bronstein |
2008 | ||
2008 | ||
Until the Light Takes Us | 2008 | Aaron Aites and |
2009 | Ry Russo-Young | |
Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo | 2009 | |
Brock Enright: Good Times Will Never Be the Same | 2009 | Jody Lee Lipes |
Impolex | 2009 | Alex Ross Perry |
Wah Do Dem | 2009 | Sam Fleischner and |
Rio Breaks | 2009 | |
Damon and Naomi: 1001 Nights | 2009 | |
2009 | Matt Boyd | |
Gabi on the Roof in July | 2010 | Lawrence Michael Levine |
2010 | Brent Green | |
Shit Year | 2010 | Cam Archer |
Two Gates of Sleep | 2010 | |
Vacation! | 2010 | Zach Clark |
N.Y. Export: Op. Jazz | 2010 | Jody Lee Lipes and Henry Joost |
Convento | 2010 | Jarred Alterman |
I am Secretly an Important Man | 2010 | |
The Oregonian | 2011 | |
The Zone | 2011 | Joe Swanberg |
The Color Wheel[12] | 2011 | Alex Ross Perry |
The Family Jams | 2011 | Kevin Barker |
A Rubberband is an Unlikely Instrument | 2011 | Matt Boyd |
The Other Side of Sleep | 2011 | Rebecca Daly |
Kids of Today | 2011 | Jerome de Missolz |
Green[13] | 2011 | Sophia Takal |
Buttons | 2011 | The Safdie Brothers |
Art History | 2011 | Joe Swanberg |
Silver Bullets | 2011 | Joe Swanberg |
New Jerusalem | 2011 | Rick Alverson |
Fake It So Real | 2011 | Robert Greene |
Jobriath A.D. | 2012 | Kieran Turner |
Kid-Thing | 2012 | David Zellner |
Bad Fever | 2012 | Dustin Guy Defa |
Better Than Something: Jay Reatard | 2012 | Alex Hammond and Ian Markiewicz |
Sun Don't Shine[14] | 2012 | Amy Seimetz |
Pavilion[9] | 2012 | Tim Sutton |
Nancy, Please | 2012 | Andrew Semans |
Marvin, Seth and Stanley | 2012 | Stephen Gurewitz |
Richard's Wedding | 2012 | Onur Tukel |
Exit Elena | 2012 | Nathan Silver |
Apocalypse: A Bill Callahan Tour Film | 2012 | Hanly Banks |
Ape | 2012 | Joel Potrykus |
Francine[15] | 2012 | Brian M. Cassidy and Melanie Shatzky |
First Winter | 2012 | Benjamin Dickinson |
All the Light in the Sky | 2012 | Joe Swanberg |
The Sheik and I | 2012 | Caveh Zahedi |
The Voice of the Voiceless | 2013 | Maximón Monihan |
Boneshaker[16] | 2013 | Frances Bodomo |
Privacy Setting | 2013 | Joe Swanberg |
Hellaware | 2013 | Michael M. Bilandic |
Bluebird[17] | 2013 | Lance Edmands |
Little Feet[16] | 2013 | Alexandre Rockwell |
See You Next Tuesday | 2013 | Drew Tobia |
Go Down Death[18] | 2013 | Aaron Schimberg |
Brothers Hypnotic | 2013 | Reuben Atlas |
Young Bodies Heal Quickly | 2014 | Andrew T. Betzer |
Christmas, Again | 2014 | Charles Poekel |
Down in Shadowland | 2014 | Tom DiCillo |
Sex and Broadcasting: A Film About WFMU | 2014 | Tim K. Smith |
Diamond Tongues[19] | 2015 | Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson |
Videophilia (and Other Viral Syndromes)[20] | 2015 | Juan Daniel F. Molero |
Stinking Heaven[19] | 2015 | Nathan Silver |
Almost There[21] | 2015 | Dan Rybicky and Aaron Wickenden |
Uncle Kent 2[19] | 2015 | Todd Rohall |
Bloomin Mud Shuffle | 2015 | Frank V. Ross |
Come Down Molly | 2015 | Gregory Kohn |
Ma | 2015 | Celia Rowlson-Hall |
Homemakers | 2015 | Colin Healey |
The Arbalest | 2016 | Adam Pinney |
All This Panic | 2016 | Jenny Gage |
Icaros: A Vision | 2016 | Leonor Caraballo and Matteo Norzi |
No Light and No Land Anywhere | 2016 | Amber Sealey |
For the Plasma | 2016 | Bingham Bryant and Kyle Molzan |
Werewolf | 2016 | Ashley McKenzie |
Sylvio | 2017 | Albert Birney and Kentucker Audley |
Assholes | 2017 | Peter Vack |
The Show About the Show | 2017 | Caveh Zahedi |
Sundowners | 2017 | Pavan Moondi |
Being Frank: The Chris Sievey Story | 2019 | Steve Sullivan |
Jobe'z World | 2019 | Michael M. Bilandic |
Two Plains & a Fancy | 2019 | Lev Kalman and Whitney Horn |
August at Akiko's | 2019 | Christopher Makoto Yogi |
Ham on Rye[22] | 2019 | Tyler Taormina |
Empty Metal | 2019 | Adam Khalil and Bayley Sweitzer |
Produced By Factory 25:
Title | Year | Director |
---|---|---|
Summer of Blood | 2014 | Onur Tukel |
Applesauce | 2015 | Onur Tukel |
2015 | Onur Tukel | |
Cooklyn | 2016 | Bryan Wizemann |
Tormenting the Hen | 2017 | Theodore Collatos |
The Great Pretender | 2018 | Nathan Silver |
Queen of Lapa | 2019 | Theodore Collatos |
You Mean Everything to Me | 2020 | Bryan Wizemann |
Inspector Ike | 2020 | Graham Mason |
All The Old Bells | 2020 | Brent Green |
Music Releases[]
Album | Year | Artist |
---|---|---|
Torben | 2010 | Brock Enright & Kirsten Deirup |
Exclamation Point | 2010 | DA! |
Sub-Urban Insult Rock for the Anti-Lectual | 2010 | Tutu & the Pirates |
Heaven Know's What: Original Music From the Film | 2015 | Ariel Pink and Blood Orange |
Accolades[]
Factory 25 was named "Best Distributor" by The L Magazine in their "Best of Brooklyn 2013: Film" article.[23]
References[]
- ^ "Factory Boy: Matt Grady Talks Distribution". December 22, 2010.
- ^ Hillis, Aaron (2 July 2013). "Factory 25: Turning art films into art objects". MovieMaker. Playa Vista, California. Retrieved 29 Dec 2019.
- ^ Renninger, Bryce J. (June 26, 2009). "New Distrib Factory 25 Melds Music and Film in Brooklyn".
- ^ https://www.moviemaker.com/archives/articles/factory-25-trailblazer-tuesday/
- ^ Jump up to: a b Ryzik, Melena (20 August 2019). "D.I.Y. Music Labels Embrace D.I.Y. Film". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 Dec 2019.
- ^ Dollar, Steve (December 22, 2010). "The Art Is in the Packaging". The Wall Street Journal.
- ^ Ryzik, Melena (August 20, 2010). "Jagjaguwar, Factory 25 and Indie Film" – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ "Fandor Partners With Cinedigm, Factory 25 and Oscilloscope Laboratories". www.prnewswire.com.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Sridhar, Srimathi (June 26, 2012). "Factory 25 Acquires 'Pavilion' for Worldwide Distribution; Exclusive Digital Distribution with Oscilloscope Labs". IndieWire. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- ^ "Alexandre Rockwell on Restoring and Preserving the Unique Black and White of In the Soup". Filmmaker (Interview). Filmmaker Magazine. 1 August 2017. Retrieved 29 Dec 2019.
- ^ Brody, Richard (October 6, 2009). "Frownland". The New Yorker. Condé Nast. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Cronk, Jordan (11 April 2016). "Knoxville's Big Ears Festival, the Avant-Garde SXSW, Adds a Film Program". Brooklyn. Brooklyn Magazine. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- ^ Macaulay, Scott. "FACTORY 25 ACQUIRES SOPHIA TAKAL'S "GREEN" FOR WORLD DISTRIBUTION".
- ^ Brody, Richard (January 17, 2013). "The State of the "Art Film"". The New Yorker. Retrieved 29 Dec 2019 – via Condé Nast.
- ^ Cox, Gordon (September 10, 2012). "Factory 25 takes 'Francine'".
- ^ Jump up to: a b Salovaara, Sarah. "Factory 25 Acquires Little Feet and Boneshaker".
- ^ McNary, Dave (December 2, 2014). "John Slattery's 'Bluebird' Bought for U.S. by Factory 25".
- ^ Salovaara, Sarah. "Go Down Death Acquired by Factory 25".
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Choi, Sarah (25 June 2015). "Fandor and Factory 25 Jointly Acquire 7 Feature Films". IndieWire. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- ^ "Peru Oscar Entry 'Videofilia' Ports To Factory 25; 'The War Show' Acquired By Bond/360 – Film Briefs". www.yahoo.com.
- ^ Page, Aubrey (November 12, 2015). "Factory 25 Acquires Outsider Art Documentary 'Almost There'". IndieWire. Penske Business Media. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- ^ Kay, Jeremy. "Locarno Film Festival selection 'Ham On Rye' lands at Factory 25 (exclusive)". Screen.
- ^ "Best of Brooklyn 2013: Film". The L Magazine. July 31, 2013. Retrieved 29 Dec 2019.
Further reading[]
- Founder Grady appears on this list: Staff (11 March 2014). "The 100 Most Influential People in Brooklyn Culture". Brooklyn. Brooklyn Magazine. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- Founder Grady presenting at SXSW 2016: "Mentors - Distribution: Matt Grady (Factory 25)". SXSW Schedule (Announcement of presentation schedule). SXSW LLC. 2016. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
Interviews[]
- Grady, Matt (22 December 2010). "Factory Boy: Matt Grady Talks Distribution". Interview Magazine (Interview). Interviewed by Durga Chew-Bose. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
- Grady, Matt (2018). "Matt Grady". Filmatique (Interview). Interviewed by Ursula Grisham. Retrieved 30 Dec 2019.
External links[]
- Factory 25 Website FACTORY 25 - Home
- American companies established in 2009
- Entertainment companies established in 2009