Film/TV

Norwegian Film Institute Selects NAGRA’s DVnor Organizer Media Asset Management Solution for Worldwide Distribution of Content (MESA)

NAGRA announced that the Norwegian Film Institute has selected NAGRA’s media asset management platform, DVnor Organizer, for secure storage and one-click distribution of its films to more than 170 film festivals worldwide. The solution will enable the NFI to receive, store and distribute new cinema titles in high-quality from all the major Norwegian film producers and production companies, as well as store more than 300 catalogue titles.

It will also provide subtitling packages in different languages.

“We’re delighted to extend our collaboration with NAGRA and the DVnor team on the deployment of a media asset solution that will make it easy for us to store and distribute our film assets around the world in a highly secure environment with just one click,” said Stine Helgeland, Head of Department Communications, Strategic Insight and International Relations, NFI. “The best part is that all of our needs are met with one solution, making the process extremely efficient and streamlined.”

“Secure, efficient and smart content workflows are a must in today’s film distribution environment and we’re extremely proud that the NFI has entrusted us to store and distribute their film assets,” said Morten Solbakken, EVP & COO DTV at NAGRA. “Our solutions are designed for film and content owners giving them with the peace of mind that their valuable content remains secure at every step of the process thanks to NAGRA’s best-of-breed content protection technologies.”

DVnor Organizer is an end-to-end media asset management solution that gives content owners full control of their master files, with automated ingestion, quality control and secure storage. Files are transcoded and distributed worldwide from the secure NAGRA cloud leveraging NAGRA content security and NexGuard forensic watermarking solutions. NAGRA currently provides a library solution to the NFI allowing all Norwegian citizens with a public library card to have access to their film catalogue.