I know Im a little late here. The topic has probably died down. But heres my 2 cents anyway. I think the question is too vague. All we know about MAN A is that he has a degree? All we know about MAN B is that he has knowledge and experience?
Doesnt take a rocket scientist to choose MAN B.
A degree, by itself, leaves questions. Depends on many things. What kind of degree? What did it take to earn the degree? From what school? Not all film schools are the same, extremely narrow minded and naive to think so - huge variety ranging from pathetic waste of time to invaluable, depending on, among other things, what you want from the school, your perspective, and did you try to meet the school halfway, or further? Or did you waste away your nights on Playstation?
My view on film school is dont go expecting them to really teach you. They will, but not as much as youd like to think (usually). I think film school is best for those who already have a solid understanding of what they want to do. Most are in fact structured this way, requiring applicants to provide reels/resume/portfolio. Many reasons for that, one being so that once you begin your first school project - it wont be so much of a learnng expeience and pehaps strengthen your portfolio/resume/reel. Also youll most likely take school seriously and not waste anybody's precious tme.
You can learn and gain experience before school by:
-writing(scripts) its free or very cheap
-shooting a few no-budget shorts
-helping out others for free
-reading (THIS IS A BIG HELP. It makes me laugh how many people actually think they cant learn about filmmaking from books. Sure, not ALL books are helpful. Do a little research - ebay, the internet, plenty of sites recomend and give synopsis and review of books - too lazy and/or impatient? then give up now....or cotinue, make my competition that much softer (I actually hate thinking of fimmaking as competition - I dont take any awards seriously) Sure actually doing sometiing is great. But wouldnt it be greater if you brushed up on the subject first. Books are jst "writte text" - they wont bte you. Try operating an unfamiliarcamera wthout reading te manual first. The manual is just "written text."
Then, when attending film school, go for a Masters. That way you can also teach film in college. Good thing to able to do, something to fall back on, except is still film related and working at a school gives you access to people and equipment. So its not really "falling back." You cant lose. You have the summer off to work on your projects, plus one-month winter-break (usually). Can find time to do that during school year, too.
Masters takes time and work-yes. But again, the entire film industry requires patience and hardwork. Besides the abilty to teach, Masters is just more comprehensive, better.
Of course tution can be a problem. So all depends on your budget. But as a fim-teacher, you have job security to pay off student loans. I try not to let money stand in my way. (No Im not rich. I come from a low-middle class blue-collar background.)
So if MAN A has earned a Masters degree from tough film school and is a real -getter,hthen I give him som credibilty.
But that's just my opinion. Many probably disagree. And thats fine.
Before you poke holes in my opinion, make sure you've read what I've written carefully :shock: :roll:
Thanks