
Founded in 2011, Letterboxd is a New Zealand-based social cataloging startup that lets users track, rate, review, and discuss films. Often described as “Goodreads for movies,” the platform has become one of the most influential online communities for film enthusiasts, critics, and casual viewers alike.
Its core idea is simple but powerful: turn film watching into a shared, social experience where users can log what they watch, build lists, follow others, and discover new films through community-driven recommendations.
As of 2026, Letterboxd has grown into a major global platform with tens of millions of users and deep cultural influence in film discussion and discovery.
Letterboxd was created by Matthew Buchanan and Karl von Randow, two New Zealand web designers and film enthusiasts.
They started the project with a clear observation: while books had Goodreads and music had Last.fm, film culture lacked a simple, social, and structured platform for personal tracking and discussion.
Their solution was Letterboxd—an online diary for movies combined with a social layer that lets users interact through reviews, lists, and ratings. Initially launched as an invite-only beta, it gradually expanded into a global platform as organic word-of-mouth growth took over.
Letterboxd’s growth has been largely organic rather than aggressively venture-backed:
Despite acquisition interest, the founders have remained actively involved in guiding product direction.
Letterboxd operates on a freemium social SaaS model:
Unlike traditional streaming platforms, Letterboxd does not host content. Instead, it acts as a behavioral layer on top of global cinema consumption.
Letterboxd has become a major cultural force in modern film discourse:
It has effectively redefined how audiences organize and talk about film in the digital era.
Despite its success, Letterboxd faces several structural challenges:
A key tension is maintaining its “independent film community” feel while scaling globally under investor ownership.
Letterboxd is positioned at an interesting growth inflection point:
The platform’s future depends heavily on whether it can scale without losing its cultural authenticity.
From a small New Zealand side project to a global film discovery platform, Letterboxd has reshaped how audiences track and talk about movies. Built by Matthew Buchanan and Karl von Randow, the startup succeeded not through aggressive monetization, but through community-driven growth and cultural relevance.
Its story shows how simple behavioral tools—when designed well—can evolve into powerful global platforms that shape entire industries.









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