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Inside the Film Festival Premiere of 'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin'

Inside the Film Festival Premiere of 'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin'

Inside the Film Festival Premiere of 'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin'

'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin' debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival on Wednesday to a packed crowd.

'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin' debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival on Wednesday to a packed crowd.

'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin' debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival on Wednesday to a packed crowd.

AccessTimeIconApr 24, 2014, 6:00 PM
Updated Sep 3, 2021, 11:59 AM

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The hotly anticipated film 'The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin' premiered last night (23rd April) at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York.

The documentary, directed by Nicholas Mross, follows his brother, software developer and former bitcoin miner Daniel Mross, as he traces the short but momentous history of bitcoin, traveling everywhere from Tokyo to Seattle to Panama to speak with the industry’s pioneers.

The film covers all of bitcoin’s high-profile twists and turns since 2011, when Daniel first became involved with the community.

Many at the screening were bitcoiners, but the events portrayed were such that more mainstream viewers would have been familiar with most of the content.

The plot

The movie begins with its underpinning – mining – describing in most basic terms how bitcoins are released and circulated; and ends with Newsweek’s controversial exposé on Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto, the man they likely falsely identified as the creator of the Bitcoin protocol.

The narrative grows slowly, and then suddenly and tremendously, in a way that reflects the real-world rise of the bitcoin phenomenon.

Near the end of the film, Daniel remarks:

“Over the past several months, the mining landscape has changed significantly. When I first started, mining was for geeks. Now, it's big business.”

In the demonstrably pro-bitcoin production, price volatility, the failure of Mt Gox, bitcoin’s connection to digital black market Silk Road and the arrest of former BitInstant CEO and Bitcoin Foundation vice chairman Charlie Shrem are presented as events of little consequence to the bigger picture; events that many bitcoiners believed to be necessary for the technology and currency to mature.

More important are the smaller and increasingly frequent events that lead to wider bitcoin adoption – businesses beginning to accept bitcoin and regulators becoming open to learning about it.

In a talk following the screening, Nicholas said:

"It’s still sort of early … a lot of these companies, a lot of these startups helped pave the way to kind of smooth out some of the bumps, and we're seeing now a shift into the more established financial companies in the world of finance, so I think it’s just gonna get better as we move forward."

Daniel added that he thinks these uncertainties are actually opportunities for a lot of startups and existing businesses.

Complications

These opportunities are not without complications, though. For example, bitcoin has such a vast range of uses and it is increasing in popularity.

For the bitcoin rookie, the film gives a sufficient introduction to its role in technology, business and finance. While the technology may be alive and well, regulators will likely debate bitcoin as a currency for some time if it wants to gain wider adoption.

Jennifer Shasky Calvery, the director of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), says in the film that the innovation around bitcoin and the virtual economy is “interesting” and continues:

 “The flip side is that being part of the global system and financial system comes with the responsibility that your organisation will not be used by organised terror groups.”
the-rise-and-rise-of-bitcoin

But, the film emphasizes that the regulatory battles will play out as feats in the greater endeavor to make Main Street comfortable with bitcoin, and that regulatory setbacks and scandals tied to shady players like Mt Gox and Silk Road shouldn’t blind anyone to the advantages, potential and fundamentals of the technology.

Daniel said in the panel following: “We wanted to stress, too, that bitcoin is a piece of software and it’s public domain. So anything that you tie to it, any externalities, don’t actually have to do with it.

It’s just a computer program. People are using it a lot of different ways, and that’s what we tried to show, that there’s a lot of different ways people are using it. So, to tie it to just one-particular-use cases, is a little bit short-sighted, I think.”

Among the more prominent members of the cast are Shrem; CEO of former exchange TradeHill Jered Kenna; developer Gavin Andresen; bitcoin evangelist and Coinapult co-founder Erik Voorhees; Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles; and bitcoin angel investor and evangelist Roger Ver.

Additional appearances are made by Yifu Guo, Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, Ryan Singer, Brian Armstrong, Fred Ehrsam, Tony Gallippi, Stephen Pair and Vitalik Buterin.

Panel discussion

The panel following the show included Shrem and the Mross brothers, and was moderated by New York Times financial markets reporter Nathaniel Popper.

The evening seemed as much an entrance for bitcoin as it was for Shrem, who has been held under house arrest since January. He was given temporary reprieve to attend the screening.

Shrem was indicted last week on money laundering charges tied to Silk Road. Having made it clear throughout the film that the case doesn’t mean the end for him and bitcoin, he said in the panel:

"Bitcoin belongs to everyone, there’s a place for bitcoin in the heart of every person. Someday – 10 years from now, 20 years from now – bitcoin will be powering underlying infrastructure of our banking system, or the way I send money to you, or to me, or from one person in China to pay for a surgery that needs to happen at 2:00 in the morning on a Saturday night, or for anything."

He added: "I think involvement can be you sitting at your computer or it can be you running a multi-billion dollar company. Everyone’s involved ... So really, I hate to call it the people’s currency, because I’ll be called a communist, but it is the people’s currency, at the end of the day.”

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