Film Grove

Film Grove Film Grove is an exclusive streaming service for independent filmmakers. We obtain some short and feature films through an online film festival.

We provide a premium distribution platform for fiction shorts, long and short form documentaries, full length micro budget features and nationally produced television shows. Paying filmmakers for their films creates a strong and healthy independent film industry. Film Grove pays contributing film makers based on the number of complete views received per quarter, as tabulated by Roku. We are a Las

Vegas based online film festival and streaming channel available through Roku. Others we accept through direct submissions. You can be assured that our screeners review your film in its entirety because we pay them for their work. Submissions open on August 1, 2017. The final deadline for submissions is November 20, 2017. If your film was produced in 2015-2017, you can submit it via the online film festival through FilmFreeway. https://filmfreeway.com/festival/FilmGroveOnlineFilmFestival

If your film was produced in 2012-2014, you may submit to Film Grove directly. Film Grove limits is channel content to films that receive at least a three out of five rating from our screeners. All genres are accepted. Films produced in the United States and all other countries are accepted. For more information, please go to our website at filmgrove.com.

06/05/2026

Netflix’s film boss says “there’s a group of filmmakers who still want theatrical” that they’ve “accepted we just won’t work with.” https://wp.me/pc8uak-1lHlRK

“One mistake I made when I first joined the company,” Dan Lin told the Times, “was that filmmakers always said to me, ‘Please tell me the truth.’ And when I told them the truth, they might not have wanted to hear it. So now I’m learning how to better read people. And if someone tells me they want to hear the truth, I tell it in a way that can be as productive as possible.”

06/01/2026

The Tulsa Race Massacre occurred between May 31 and June 1, 1921, when a white mob violently attacked the prosperous African American community of Greenwood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, historically known as "Black Wall Street".
Over 35 square blocks were burned, leaving up to 300 people dead and thousands homeless.

The violence was ignited on May 30, 1921, after Dick Roland, a young Black shoe shiner, was accused of assaulting Sarah Paige, a white elevator operator in a downtown building.

Although the encounter was likely a misunderstanding and local police planned to dismiss the charges, inflammatory reports in the Tulsa Tribune newspaper incensed the local white community.

On the evening of May 31, an armed group of Black men, many of whom were World War I veterans went to the Tulsa courthouse to protect Roland from a lynch mob. A standoff ensued, shots were fired, and the vastly outnumbered Black men retreated to the Greenwood neighborhood.

Throughout the night and into the next day, armed mobs of white residents ,some deputized and armed by local officials invaded Greenwood. They looted, burned, and destroyed more than 1,400 Black-owned homes and businesses. Notably, rioters even utilized private airplanes to drop incendiary bombs on the neighborhood.

The Oklahoma governor subsequently declared martial law, and the National Guard arrived, detaining thousands of surviving Black residents in internment camps.

Contemporary news reports downplayed the event, and the tragic destruction was largely omitted from American history books for decades.

While exact casualty numbers were heavily obscured at the time, historians estimate that between 50 and 300 Black residents were killed.










05/31/2026
05/07/2026
05/05/2026

Spike Lee is defending the Michael Jackson biopic after some criticized the film for excluding the music icon's child SA allegations.

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