Video Renaissance has been a Sarasota institution for 33 years. During its life it has been a haven for cinephiles, artists, and misfits, and. We received a cultural education from its collection of over 50,000 films, not only the entire array of golden era classics but a vast archive of the strange and obscure.After outlasting every other video store, Video Renaissance has finally closed its doors. But while the store is gone,Store owner Bill Wooldridge has started selling his collection, film by film. A small fraction has already been sold. In doing so, though, he is having to break up a library that took over three decades to assemble. VR's archive includes countless films that areIt contains, along with popular hit films, a vast repository of art house films, foreign films, and lost wonders from all of 20th century cinema. You name it, VR had it.As Sarasota movie lovers,and split up. Losing Video Renaissance means that Sarasotans will lose all access to this remarkable library. Again, in many case we are talking about stuff you WILL NOT find on Amazon or Netflix. If you want to see them, you'd have to buy them.Few towns in America are fortunate enough to have a film archive like Sarasota has had. Yet soon none of us will be able to access it, because it will all have been sold off.to these films for the people of Sarasota. If we can purchase all of the remaining stock, we can ensure that each film is housed in a publicly accessible library facility.That way,, rich and poor alike, will permanently be able to borrow and watch the obscure, hard-to-find, out-of-print material from Video Renaissance collection of the weird and wonderful. And FOR FREE. This will be an incredible gift to Sarasota's culture. As a city that prides itself on its support of film and the arts, and the home of the Sarasota film festival, Sarasota deserves a world-class public film library.Bill has to sell the collection. He has poured his life into Video Renaissance, and its stock needs to be used to ensure he can retire. But if the collection is sold piecemeal to private buyers, Sarasota will lose its premiere film library.If we can raise $40,000, Bill won't have to keep selling the collection piece by piece.He has been an incredible cultural asset to the city of Sarasota. Many of us grew up loving Video Renaissance. Bill and the late Terry Porter introduced us to a whole exciting world of strange and exotic cinema. Video Renaissance was so, so much more than a video rental store. It was a community center, a place where you could always find something incredible you'd never seen before, and spend hours chatting away with Bill or Terry about what they'd seen. (And they had seen EVERYTHING.)He has suffered from serious and costly health problems in recent years, and he needs to get value out of his collection. We as Sarasota film-lovers want to make sure that as he finally closes his doors, he receives something close to the value of what his priceless films, company, and friendship have given us.We are in discussion with both the Sarasota Public Library and the New College Library about how best to to proceed and make as much of this as we can available. Most likely, material not already currently available at the public library will be donated there, and for films that are already in the public library's collection, we will attempt to find a different library that does not have these films. Either way, we will do everything we can to make sure that as much as possible of this collection is made freely available.With the closure of Video Renaissance, our town is losing one of its most precious cultural spaces. No matter what, it's a sad moment for our community. Butby ensuring its movies end up in a public library instead of with private collectors.Don't just think of your contribution as a "donation." It's also a purchase:Instead of purchasing these films individually, or even renting them for money from a corporate streaming service (the ones that you even CAN rent), you will be able to get one at the library ANY TIME.ABOUT US: This campaign is being run by two Sarasota film-lovers, Damien Bythrow and Nathan J. Robinson. We are longtime fans of the store, and Damien is an ex-employee. We are very committed to making sure every dollar donated is spent only on (1) purchasing the collection from Bill and (2) any costs associated with storage and archiving, though these will be minimal if we can secure assistance from the library. We are happy to answer any questions about this campaign and the logistics. Email me at [email redacted]