Click here to watch before Netflix pulls it from the streaming library (as the company often does): Life 2.0, the acclaimed 2010 documentary on virtual world life, love, business, and identity -- and how they all bleed over into the real world. And I do mean acclaimed: After premiering at Sundance, the film had a good run in the arthouse circuit, garnered 89% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes*, a great review in the New Yorker, and then Oprah Winfrey picked it up for her new cable network,
I interviewed the director, Jason Spingarn-Koff, when the movie played at South by Southwest -- watch below:
It's been awhile since I saw it, but as I recall, it dwelled a bit too much for my taste on the "dark side" of Second Life and the financial aspect of making a business in and marketing to the virtual world, and little about the many collaborative creation communities that flowered from everywhere. But that just means there's more stories to be told.
Anyway, please discuss in Comments!
* Interesting that Rotten Tomato's reader response is a very low 56% -- probably suggesting the subject matter came across as creepy and/or depressing to a general audience.
fresh news, huh? 2011 great! :)
Posted by: tesla | Monday, April 19, 2021 at 01:01 AM
Thank you for the head's up on this. Somehow missed news about it when it was released back in the day but great that I can now check it out tonight on Netflix.
As for tesla's comment, I guess they entirely missed the "Now available on Netflix" headline.
Posted by: PK O'toole | Wednesday, April 21, 2021 at 01:48 PM