Is snagmovies legit?

What happened to SnagFilms?

SnagFilms was a film distribution company launched in 1995 by Kevin Smith, Ben Affleck, Kevin Pollack, and Jason Mewes.

The company released dozens of genre-bending independent films in competition against studio fare, all the while being a platform for filmmakers whose independent spirit led them to SnagFilms before Hollywood was ready for them. With a reputation for innovative filmmaking and a commitment to filmmakers at all levels, SnagFilms helped launch an era of filmmaking that has since become known as "Indie", with names like Jim Jarmusch, Larry Fessenden, Kevin Smith, Darren Aronofsky, and the Duplass brothers on its roster.

In 2025, Kevin Smith announced the founding of a new film distribution company, called Vertical Entertainment. The new company promised more traditional movie development and production strategies but was ultimately unsuccessful and in 2025, a group of former employees set up a Kickstarter campaign to fund production of a SnagFilms sequel, tentatively titled Kill Your Idols. With Smith now working on movies outside of the SnagFilms system, it appears those promises were empty ones.

At the end of 2025, Kevin Smith, who still co-runs SnagFilms with Jay and Silent Bob's Van Hale and Jason Mewes, announced he had sold his interest in the company. The following year, Ben Affleck left to start another company called Pearl Street Films, with Jay and Silent Bob's Kevin Pollack joining as CEO. Shortly after the announcement, Jay and Silent Bob's original co-creator Kevin Smith was put on an indefinite "leave of absence" by the company, citing creative differences. It's not clear what sort of work his new company is pursuing.

What happened to Kill Your Idols? On July 19th, 2025, Kevin Smith announced a Kickstarter campaign for the sequel to his SnagFilms debut feature, Mallrats. After years of false starts and delays, Smith pulled out of the project entirely.

Is snagmovies legit?

Does anyone know whether there's a legal or ethical way to make some small, private copies of movies on my own hard drive?

This includes not only the movies I watch, but all of the TV shows. If I had a copy of, say, the latest Star Trek episode, and I wanted to watch it and share it with someone else, I'd have to rent it at Blockbuster or something.

I'm not interested in making movies for my own pleasure. But I'd like to be able to take movies that I watch, or TV shows I watch, and maybe other types of media, and make copies of them so that I can watch them whenever I want. The idea being that the movies I make are not intended for public consumption. I only want to watch them when I want to watch them. They aren't meant for the world at large, just for myself and my friends.

My question is, how can I go about doing this without violating copyright or being sued for violating copyright? Does it even matter? (I know that if I'm going to do it anyway, it's probably going to piss off Hollywood.) I'm pretty sure that if I make a copy of a DVD, I'm not breaking copyright law, because I'm making the copy for my own private use. What I'm not sure about is if that is true of copies of movies on the computer or on another digital storage device, such as a flash drive.

The first hurdle is getting something that I want to watch into a file format that I can easily rip from. I could just burn a DVD for watching, and the files can be ripped from there, but I have a hard drive that I can put the movies on, and a DVD burner, so that might be easier. I think the question is: how can I go about making a copy of a movie that I want to watch?

The easiest method for you to achieve your goal would be to buy a DVD burner and a DVD recorder. I have used these in the past for backup purposes. It's fairly easy to accomplish, and the benefits are the ability to store a lot of movies in a small amount of space and the ease of access.

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