The real problem is who controls the money sets the politics. The dreamers with the empty pockets get drowned out.
The real problem is who controls the money sets the politics. The dreamers with the empty pockets get drowned out.
Story and writing are important. However, they are not nearly as important as C.R.E.A.M. (Cash Rules Everything Around Me). Money can buy the best writers, story, actors, crew, special effects, and distributors.
The reason why most Indie films fail is because the filmmaker don't have money to buy the best people to make their films. And, that is the bottom line.
I guess you haven't dealt with many people at the top of their industry before. It's not always as simple as that. Some of these talented people aren't motivated by the money. They're already rich. Some are looking for a combination of "other factors". There are a bunch of people you can (usually) buy with money. Those who need it to put food on the table.
What would be your limit of how much money are you willing to throw at a solution before it becomes completely financially unviable? 100mil? 500mil? 800mil? even then you won't be guaranteed a hit.
2 words: Expendables 3. Money was not the issue. Money cannot ensure you end up with a quality film. It's the exact same reasons that some studio films flop. Some expensive ones too. John Carter anyone?
You need money, yes. Just because you have an unlimited fund doesn't mean your film will suck any less. Just because you have the budget to hire anyone doesn't mean they'll agree to work on your project. Just because you have the unlimited budget doesn't mean you'll make the right decisions.
Money is only part of the formula. Talent, expertise and the ability of the team to work coherently together to form a film that is larger than the sum of its parts. There's a lot of intangible parts that need to be considered.
After the "beginning" is over, you now have to make sure it leaves your computer and goes on to the real world. And then without a marketing budget......how great can your story really be?
It has always been about C.R.E.A.M. since the human civilization began. "Money talks and B.S. walks" is another less specific way of putting it.
The biggest barrier of why amateur films look so bad is lack of funds to pay for professional help to make them look respectable.
If all you have, for instance, is $100 a day for a sound person to work on set with you, you will get a student sound person with some schooling and very little experience. If you have $375 a day, you can get a 20 year veteran who lots of experience of tricks of the trade and your results will be a good ten fold better.
In this forum most filmmakers write their own scripts because they can't afford a writer with a proven track record of selling scripts to studios and who studios ask for by name for projects in development.
How do you get a script into the hands of Tom Cruz as well as something he likes to sign onto? C.R.E.A.M.
whether or not it was made without studio distribution in place.
One man crews are insane. Too many people do too much learn as you go and it shows in poor results.
Individuals don't have the money to afford the same help.
There is always bad money management and studio politics.
However, compare the success rate to a no budget film to a 10 mil to 100 mil film and you will see how much big money helps just like having a big name actor attached to a film. It does not guarantee results, but it greatly increases it.
Not only that, the better production values of a 100 mil film makes it much more watchable than a no budget film with bad locations, bad editing, bad sound, bad acting, bad music even with a decent script to the public who is spoiled by studio standards.
The biggest barrier of why amateur films look so bad is lack of funds to pay for professional help to make them look respectable.
Basically, he's trading high end gear for something that allows for a more gritty reality.
A professional is expected to bring a professional result. To bring back my above point. Lets say SuperSoundie is the best soundie in the world. Do you think $375 a day will secure that person for your film? APE, Alcove, what do you think?
I lost a few job interviews for management positions for dwelling too much on details the way you do.
After the "beginning" is over, you now have to make sure it leaves your computer and goes on to the real world. And then without a marketing budget, since all the money has been spent on production, you have to figure out how to get more than 5 people interested in your film, not because your film is a spectacle, not because you have a great story (how great can your story really be?
Are you sure? There's no chance it's your reading/listening skills?
The biggest barrier of why many amateur films look so bad is often because the filmmaker is concentrating all their efforts on making their film look good! Of course, there are many other potential reasons too. Additionally, many budgeted unsuccessful amateur films really don't look that bad.
I think we need to be careful with statements like this, particularly on a forum like this. Sure, he used an iPhone rather than say an industry standard Alexa but on the production sound side he used just about the highest end gear that money can buy. I'm not saying this should necessarily always be the case, I'm saying that the filmmaker/s prioritised where to spend their budget based on the final result they were after, which in turn was based on their experience/knowledge of the requirements and expectations of their target market.
No, the top prod sound mixers would probably want 4 times that amount per day but that would likely include the equipment. A top Re-recording mixer, including re-recording equipment, would likely cost somewhere around $800. Unfortunately though that's per hour!
MDM: Your premise, that money solves all problems, is largely true but unfortunately not quite in the way you are implying. Sure, hiring top cast/crew will dramatically improve the quality of work of all the individual film crafts. However, the two members of the crew who most influence how all those crafts integrate, to result in a good /successful film, are the producer and director. So, most importantly you need a top producer and a top director and even substantial amounts of money probably won't be enough to attract these personnel without also having a great script, which generally means hiring a great scriptwriter/s. The only "fly in the ointment" of this scenario is that there's no longer a significant role for our original amateur filmmaker!
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