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Jaman Brings The Film Festival To Your Computer

May 2, 2007 by Kirk Biglione

If you’re a fan of independent or foreign films it can be surprisingly difficult to track down new and interesting movies. You’re pretty much limited to catching films at the local art-house during the first run, waiting for them to run on IFC or the Sundance channel, waiting for a copy to become available on Netflix, or splurging on a DVD of a movie you may only watch once. Any way you look at it, there’s a lot of waiting around involved and it can be difficult to figure out what movies are worth seeing. A new download service called Jaman might just change all of this.

Jaman claims to have the rights to legally distribute over 1,000 foreign and independent films for download. That’s far more than iTunes or any other legal movie download service. Through partnerships with a number of film festivals Jaman also offers films that are currently on the festival circuit. For example, several of the movies currently screening at the Tribeca film festival in New York are available right now on Jaman, and films from the upcoming San Francisco International Film Festival will be available on Jaman next week.

Besides the emphasis on foreign and independent films there are a few things that clearly set Jaman apart from Amazon Unbox and similar services.

  • Jaman emphasizes social interaction between users. Jaman members can create and join groups based around their specific interests. The social features of Jaman also facilitate discovery and create a virtual community of foreign and independent film lovers.
  • Unlike Unbox and most of the other movie services (iTunes excluded), Jaman is cross-platform and offers a viewer that runs on both Windows and Mac.
  • Pricing is reasonable. Jaman charges just $4.99 to purchase a movie for unlimited viewing, and $1.99 to rent a movie for seven days. Here’s the best part: during the initial beta period most movie rentals are free.

In the past I’ve been skeptical about online film services because of pricing and compatibility issues resulting from DRM restrictions, but Jaman’s combination of features tempted me to give the service a try. Besides, nearly all of Jaman’s movie rentals are currently free, so there wasn’t much risk involved in my decision.

I happily created my Jaman account and downloaded a free rental of Takeshi Kitano’s Takeshis’. The movie took a little longer than two hours to download. Jaman says that popular films are downloaded directly from the company’s servers, while less popular films are distributed through a peer-to-peer network.

Once the download was complete I found that the client software worked flawlessly on my Mac and the video quality was comparable to the iTunes videos I’ve watched.

The one downside to Jaman is that all of service’s movies are protected by a proprietary DRM scheme. As a result you’ll have to use Jaman’s client software to watch movies, and you’re pretty much limited to viewing them on your computer (or hooking your computer up to your TV). I’ve done my share of railing against DRM in the past, but I’ve also been clear that one of the big issues is that many services charge a fee comparable to buying a physical media product. DRM restrictions aren’t quite as bad when, 1) the product is priced at a level that is comparable to a traditional rental, and 2) the service makes an effort to support a range of hardware devices. Jaman manages to minimize the DRM annoyance by meeting both of these criteria.

If you have any interest at all in the foreign or independent films I recommend you give Jaman a try. Especially during the beta period when you can do so at no cost.

Filed Under: Movies

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. techydude says

    November 20, 2008 at 5:44 pm

    I’ve been pretty impressed with Jaman, until recently. Unfortunately my impression of them has taken a major nose-dive, first of all when what appears to be a bug in their software blocked my access to a film i’d rented when I tried to move it to my AppleTV (hacked to include their AppleTV Jaman Player). I sent them a message saying “hey, think i found a bug here, lost my movie rental, can i download it again please?”. got no reply.

    then while researching other online movie services, i stumbled upon this:

    http://tammydes90.wordpress.com/2008/09/01/independent-filmmakers-and-producers-cheated-jaman-et-al/

    …a report of an investigation conducted by some Princeton people (with questionable spelling) into four internet movie download sites: B-side, Filmbaby, EZtakes & Jaman, all of whom appear to have misrepresented their offerings to their indy filmmakers, defrauded them, and are embroiled in lawsuits.

    some consumers might not care, but suddenly my Jaman joy has taken on a sinister shade at the realisation that:

    “In sum, independent producers and filmmakers, submitting their
    content to Jaman will lose all their rights, receive only marginal
    profits and will be bound by a questionable and (in parts) illegal
    user agreement. Also, not only are most products on Jaman.com
    overpriced and often more expensive than on Amazon, are internet blogs
    manipulated and websites such as Wikipedia ‘bribed’ for favorable
    inclusion, but the people and key executives operating the website,
    Dhillon, is a convicted criminal and fully documented online
    fraudster. This also holds true of other company executives, namely
    Shahjahan and Pressman. It will be up to US authorities to follow up
    current investigations and charges against Jaman, and finally shutting
    their company and website down. “

  2. Loren Spain says

    December 3, 2009 at 8:18 pm

    Unfortunately, I must report a situation indentical to what techydude posted on November 20th, 2008. I purchased, not rented, two films from Jaman, watched them once and didn’t download any more movies from them. Then, about a month later, I went to my computer to watch the films again and received a pop-up message that said the films no longer existed on my computer!! However, the most devastating aspect of this affair is that Jaman literally has not responded to any of my e-mailed requests for help, which they call “trouble tickets”, except to acknowledge that they received them. They have not even responded to my phone calls. This is the most mysterious and shocking lapse of customer service I’ve ever experienced, on- or offline. Something is seriously, deeply and profoundly wrong with the folks at Jaman. Silence in response to a call for help is simply unconscionable.

  3. Kirk Biglione says

    December 4, 2009 at 11:13 am

    Loren:

    Thanks for the report. It’s been well over a year since I last used Jaman and I have never purchased a movie from them (only rental).

    Generally I don’t recommend purchase of DRM restricted media. Your experience is typical of what we’ve seen from other vendors who sell DRM limited content. On the other hand, I don’t have a problem with DRM restricted rentals — it’s clear at the time of purchase that it’s just a loan.

    I don’t have any contacts at Jaman, but I will make an effort to find out what’s going on. If you made a purchase you should continue to have access to the content you paid for.

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