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Online fundraiser for ‘Veronica Mars’ movie surpasses $2 million goal

LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Veronica Mars fans just bought themselves a big-screen version of the cult favourite TV series.

An crowd-sourcing campaign to raise $2 million for the project on the Kickstarter website hit its goal in less than a day.

Show creator Rob Thomas started the effort Wednesday with help from series star Kristen Bell.

More than 33,000 contributors had pledged $2.1 million and counting as of Wednesday evening.

In his online pitch, Thomas promised that, as he put it, “The more money we raise, the cooler movie we can make.”

It’s the fastest project yet to reach $1 million on Kickstarter – in 4 hours, 24 minutes – and the most-funded film or video project to date, according to a spokesman for the site. Previous top movie fundraisers are the planned The Goon ($442,000) and Charlie Kaufman’s Anomalisa ($406,000), both animated.

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Thomas said Veronica Mars owner Warner Bros. has given the project its blessing, and Bell and other cast members (the show starred Toronto’s Enrico Colantoni) are ready to begin production this summer for a 2014 release. A studio spokesman said a limited release, meaning it may not be on thousands of screens or in every city, is likely at this point.

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The fundraising campaign ends April 12.

“You have banded together like the sassy little honey badgers you are and made this possibility happen,” Bell said in an online message, promising the “sleuthiest, snarkiest” movie possible.

She and several Veronica Mars cast members appear in a lighthearted video on Kickstarter in which they mull the prospect of reuniting.

The series averaged between 2.2 million and 2.5 million viewers in its two-year run on the now-defunct UPN and final season on the CW network. Those modest numbers are overshadowed by the intense fan devotion that has kept dreams of a movie alive.

Backers are eligible for various goodies, ranging from a PDF copy of the script to be sent on the day the film is released (for a $10 pledge) to naming rights to a character (for $8,000). An appearance in the movie, available to one $10,000 contributor, was snapped up.

Crowdsourcing has given filmmakers a new way to get always-elusive funding. At last month’s Academy Awards, the short documentary Inocente became the first Kickstarter-funded film to win an Oscar. It received $52,000 from 300 contributors.

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