My first review is up. Film and Digital Times gave Rebel without a Deal the once over. They even included their opinion on Kisses and Caroms.
I see so many claims of films made for $7k or $15k which go on to get distribution and earn millions or hundreds of millions (Paranorma Activity or El Mariachi for example). I know for a fact that even if you spent all of the $11k just on sound, you couldn't even afford to have a Dolby print-master cut. I can't get the book where I live but is the point: Make a film for say $7k show it at a regional film festival, spend another $325k to turn it into a commercially distributable product and then become famous for making a distributed film for $7k? I'm not "having a go" here, just trying to understand how/why the system works. Is it ONLY about the hype and making out a successful film cost way less than it actually did or is there something else which I'm missing?
Your comparison can be accurate. If you are Robert Zemeckis, you can get Laurie MacDonald to give you her script for free, take it to Denzel Washington and John Goodman, get them attached then get Paramount Pictures to drop the dime. So maybe Zemeckis spent $0 to make Flight. So he's better at it then Smith, Rodriguez and I, but He ain't offering a book to teach you how to avoid his pitfalls, is he?....it was the amount spent by the filmmakers to convert an idea into something which attracted a studio/distributor to supply the actual film budget... ...the budget for say "Flight" (and many other films) was somewhere around $0 or whatever amount the filmmakers spent to create the marketing materials required to get a studio/distributor to put up the roughly $31m the film actually cost to make.
Extremely? No. Marketing Spin? A little. What you're missing is, I detailed all the budgets, processess, and financial statements in my first book, Rebel without a Deal. I did make a movie in 5 days for $11k. The finished cost of the movie, by the time Warner Bros. acquired it was just over $60k.or at least being extremely disingenuous (to enhance his reputation and book sales), unless I'm missing something?
We didn't have one, the movie was released in Stereo on DVD.you couldn't even afford to have a Dolby print-master cut.
I'm just too busy trying to become Zemeckis to respond to posts. This post alone, took me an hour to compile. I give back in the form of books (a FREE one at that (till Monday, anyway, then .99)). Do I profit from them? Yes. but I only sell, maybe, 1 a day. Filmmaking books are not exactly getting the attention of the New York Times. I average $4 per book. Do the math, that's about $1200 a year for a 300 page book that was originally 700 pages and took over 4 years to write. I ain't doing it for the money. I'm trying to help.I'm not a huge fan of the fact that he only stops by to promote his own products
The latest book, 11 Simple Steps to turn a Screenplay into a Marketable Movie focuses on HOW to make a marketable movie and does not expand on the process, as that was covered exhaustively in Rebel without a Deal.I'm sure that, in his book, he'll expand on the process that was required after the film was picked up for distribution. If not then, yes, that does seem disingenuous to the point of being highly misleading.
Here's the link to the Book in the UK, It is FREE there too, until Monday, then .99. 11 Simple Steps to turn a Screenplay into a Marketable MovieI can't get the book where I live...
I did make a movie in 5 days for $11k. The finished cost of the movie, by the time Warner Bros. acquired it was just over $60k...
We didn't have one, the movie was released in Stereo on DVD.
But from the perspective of the ultra-low-budget filmmaker, it's still an $11K movie because that's what the ultra-low-budget filmmaker spent. We don't care how much the studio spends, after they've picked it up. We just care that they picked it up.
The finished cost of the movie, by the time Warner Bros. acquired it was just over $60k.
To be honest, I did not consciously make a distinction between "a" and "the"You are now much more accurately saying that you made "a" movie in 5 days for $11k. Rather than previously you said that "the" movie (the one which grossed over $1m) was made in 5 days and cost $11k.
It all depends on where you want to start and stop counting the dollars. The hour I previously spent on responding to the previous post charged at my current Editing rate would be $75 for said hour. If the post results in you watching the movie, then do I add that hour to the budget of Kisses & Caroms?many of the items on your list are for marketing and other related costs, rather than the costs to make the final film.
Nope, it was 5 days. Some say God created Earth in 7, but the earth is always in constant evolution, therefore, God is still creating Earth.took considerably longer than 5 days.
They spent NO, I repeat NO money FIXING anything. I delivered a completed master, the distributor spent a few bucks on authoring the DVD and they charged me back that money, all these fees are also detailed in Rebel without a Deal. I've also detailed them below.I'm also presuming that Warner spent no more time or money "fixing" your film once they acquired it, just distribution and marketing related costs?
Yep, as long as that movie did not change, no reshoots were done. Then it's a $100 movie.What you're saying is that in theory I could make a film on my iphone for $100, then spent another $40k to fix it up, sell my $40k film to a distributor and then market myself on the basis that I made a film for $100 which got distribution.
Columbia bought a $7000 movie. You saw a $325,000 movie, but Columbia bought a $7000 movie.OR the budget for El Mariachi was $7k
I wrote 314 pages of that truth, if you really are interested to know, would it be so detrimental to spend $14.95 on the book?Would it really have been so detrimental to tell the truth about the actual cost of the film which grossed $1m? I for one would be interested to know.
Your location is listed as Europe, I asume you have internet, Amazon is a click away. Maybe I'm wrong, maybe you're communicating through hieroglyphics.BTW, I don't live in the UK and Amazon don't deliver to my location. I'll look into acquiring an electronic version though.
It's not clear to me, how you want it calculated. I'm gonna give it a shot.It's still not clear exactly what the movie cost to make,
Rodriguez took $7k and made a product that was worthy of distribution.
The money invested in Rodriguez or Smiths films, did NOT change the movie..
I did make "a" movie in 5 days for $11k and "the" movie was made in 5 days for a cost of $11k....
Warner never bought my movie, they only distributed it. Did they distribute an $11k movie? No, and I never said they did....
It is very much common knowledge that the time spent in production, is the time it took to make a movie...
Using the hints, tricks and tips outlined in this book we made a MARKETABLE movie in five days for $11,000 with hot women, explosions, guns, a car chase, profanity, nudity, cats, dogs, indie music, great artwork, and a real trailer.....
Great quote. Thank you. I hope you enjoy the book, and after reading it, I hope you'll feel good about posting that quote to Amazon.Just a single tidbit that a film maker could get from this is worth many times your asking price and you're taking, so thank you. It looks like its worthy of reading.