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SimplyScripts Screenwriting Discussion Board    General Boards    Questions or Comments  ›  How to Make a Movie...?
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  Author    How to Make a Movie...?  (currently 3177 views)
Mr. Blonde
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 12:16pm Report to Moderator
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What good are choices if they're all bad?

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Ok, my brother is working on a feature script which he's nearly completed. At least, draft 1 but it gets easier from there. When it's done, he wants to have it made into a film (obviously) but at the same time, he wants to retain all the rights to it. In essence, he basically wants him and I to do it ourselves. Now, we are bordering on having negative money, but that's not stopping him. Because to add onto making a feature-length script ourselves, he also wants to create a production company and fin a distribution company willing to take it for a full theatrical run.

Point is, to do this requires money, even if you know the right people.  So far, we've contacted a couple contacts we both have and under perfect circumstances (if they all agree to do it and defer costs until after completion), we'd have a director, D.O.P., editor, 3-5 professional actors (one of which has actually expressed interest), the rest being film school/stage actors and three investors. Also, we'd have to find a fully-functioning restaurant, build several sets, get access to a police car and get permission from the military to borrow a couple uniforms, a patrol boat and find someone to lend us a houseboat.

This is our own personal "We're winging it" plan but what we don't have is equipment. For this part, we've been searching around for cameras, lights, film stock, blah, blah, blah. But, we don't know anything about that stuff. We don't know what cameras are good, bang for the buck-type. Lights, I guess 100-watts are good. The rest of the picture is just a big blank.

As I write this out, I've noticed how insane it is to even try. I mean, I figured that before but seeing it in front of me makes it just... completely fucked up. But, anyway:

Question 1: What equipment should we be scrounging for and how much would you figure all of it to cost?
Question 2: Would this plan work if we got everyone above that we need somehow?
Question 3: If the answer to 2 is yes, how would we go about distributing it?

Any help that could possibly be given would be appreciated more than you can figure.

P.S. Sorry for this being so long. Lots of details to point out.


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Blakkwolfe
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 12:24pm Report to Moderator
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It can be done, as "Colin" proved with a working budget of $70 dollars and a whole buttload of favors. Suggest checking Ebay, Hollywood area pawn shops and just asking around on the internet on who has what and is willing to loan it.


Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently - Dove Chocolate Wrapper
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Mr. Blonde
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 12:41pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Blakkwolfe
It can be done, as "Colin" proved with a working budget of $70 dollars and a whole buttload of favors. Suggest checking Ebay, Hollywood area pawn shops and just asking around on the internet on who has what and is willing to loan it.


I can do the Ebay and regular internet parts. Neither my brother nor myself live near Hollywood. However, we do live across the country from each other. If it all works out, it'd be filmed in NY which is closer to me, but we'll see what happens.

By the way, what's Colin?


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dogglebe
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 12:53pm Report to Moderator
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Maybe you should do a short, first.  See how that works out.


Phil
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James McClung
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:00pm Report to Moderator
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One thing I'd recommend is shooting digitally instead of using film. I think that'd be your best bet in terms of taking on a project guerilla-style like this. It lessens the costs and widens your margin of error considerably. The Panasonic DVX100 can shoot at 24 frames so it looks like film. I try to pimp it as much as I can. You could probably find a used one online easy.

As for the rest, why not try finding crew members with their own equipment? You could always post something on Craigslist. The site's way more useful than most people think.

Good luck to you, dude!


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Mr. Blonde
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:10pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from dogglebe
Maybe you should do a short, first.  See how that works out.


I'd tell him that, but he's real gung ho about doing this with this script at this time, Phil. You probably remember it from a few months back. It was called "Meat". Don't know if you read it or not, though.


Quoted from James McClung
One thing I'd recommend is shooting digitally instead of using film. I think that'd be your best bet in terms of taking on a project guerilla-style like this. It lessens the costs and widens your margin of error considerably. The Panasonic DVX100 can shoot at 24 frames so it looks like film. I try to pimp it as much as I can. You could probably find a used one online easy.

As for the rest, why not try finding crew members with their own equipment? You could always post something on Craigslist. The site's way more useful than most people think.

Good luck to you, dude!


DVX100? I'll have to check that one out. As you can imagine, we'd have to cut costs wherever and if it's used but working, it may be just what we need. I'll try the Craigslist route once we have a finished script because then, the contacts all have to fall into place. If that goes, we're probably greenlight.

Thank you, James.


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James McClung
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:17pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Mr. Blonde
I'd tell him that, but he's real gung ho about doing this with this script at this time, Phil. You probably remember it from a few months back. It was called "Meat". Don't know if you read it or not, though.


You could always shoot a short version of the same script. Maybe even use some of the scenes in the feature length. If you had a short, you might be able to scrounge together a few more investors. That's how Saw got made.


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Blakkwolfe
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:37pm Report to Moderator
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"Colin" was an ultra-low budget zombie film that did very well at Cannes last year.

Sounds like the project will be a lot of work, but also seems fun. Best of luck to you guys!


Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently - Dove Chocolate Wrapper
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Mr. Blonde
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:42pm Report to Moderator
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Yeah, James, I think my brother told me that story about Saw when he was explaining to me how we could make this work. All I could think of was Kevin Smith's story about how he did Clerks. $27,000 and he maxed out all his cards. If the movie did nothing, he was completely fucked.


Quoted from Blakkwolfe
"Colin" was an ultra-low budget zombie film that did very well at Cannes last year.

Sounds like the project will be a lot of work, but also seems fun. Best of luck to you guys!


Hmm... I may have to read up on that. Thanks, Black, although I think I'll be fretting the whole time abot how it's not going to work. Lol.


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dresseme
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 1:50pm Report to Moderator
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Get the book "Thinking Outside the Box Office".  It's basically the Distribution Bible.  You can get it from the guy's website as a PDF for only $14.95, and it's chock full of EVERYTHING you need to know about distributing on the indie level.  What sites you can distribute through for free, where to hold screenings, etc, etc.
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dogglebe
Posted: July 12th, 2010, 4:57pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Mr. Blonde
I'd tell him that, but he's real gung ho about doing this with this script at this time, Phil. You probably remember it from a few months back. It was called "Meat". Don't know if you read it or not, though.


You're better off making a short so you can see your mistakes before you work on the feature. You'll learn a lot before making a feature which you may end up throwing away because of the newbie mistakes.


Phil

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CindyLKeller
Posted: July 13th, 2010, 6:25am Report to Moderator
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Check out your "local public television station".

They can rent out cameras and equipment for free.

Let me know how this goes for you.  

Cindy


Award winning screenwriter
Available screenplays
TINA DARLING - 114 page Comedy
ONLY OSCAR KNOWS - 99 page Horror
A SONG IN MY HEART - 94 page Drama
HALLOWEEN GAMES - 105 page Drama
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George Willson
Posted: July 13th, 2010, 6:57am Report to Moderator
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Of course, another suggestion for cutting costs is to do so from the screenplay itself. You've got quite a laundry list of needs up there to make your script the way you want it, and I'm first in line to say "go for it," but to go low-budget, you have to write low budget. Boats and military does not equal low budget in most cases. Granted, I don't know your script, but I'm just saying.

My feature had five people in a single location: a residential home. No effects. Few exteriors. And while I can point out several problems in the end, my biggest issue was the sound which would have been easily correctable had I just overdubbed the whole thing with the actors when they were all still in town. Once I figured that out, they were spread across the country...literally. I have also heard of the Panasonic DVX100 as an indie favorite for shooting, so that's not a bad route to take. It also makes you look more legit.

The internet is a wonderful source of information. Use Google for all its worth. You will find your answers.


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Heretic
Posted: July 13th, 2010, 8:02am Report to Moderator
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Phil is right.  No matter how it seems now, Phil is right.  Make a short first.

For the feature...

See if you can find a Canon 5D Mark II to rent.  If you're going to spend the time it takes to make a feature, it should look at least that good.  Make sure you also find an AC who knows what they're doing, as focus pulling on the 5D is pretty clunky.  To buy the camera is gonna be somewhere in the neighbourhood of $5000 with a basic package, but this may turn out to be cheaper than renting.

The 5D operates well with relatively low light, so you can probably get away with a pretty small lighting kit, but DO NOT get less lights than you need.  Get at least a couple Fresnels and tell your DP he's working as much as possible with practical light and whatever else you can find (Lowels are good and relatively cheap, and are serviceable for the 5D).  Search for deals...equipment rental houses are very nice to indie filmmakers, or you can find cheap stuff to buy.  You can probably figure out your entire lighting kit for under a grand if you're clever AND if you shoot very tight and fast.

Strongly recommend against building sets.  Work with modifying existing locations.  Set building will destroy you.  George has a very good point.  Modify your script to suit your budget.

Spend at least a thousand dollars on your sound equipment.  Buy or rent a shotgun mic and a mixer, or better yet, find some poor chump who has his own equipment and is willing to do location sound for free.  They exist.  

You sound like you want to make something professional and if you do, this is the bare, bare, bare minimum (and your light and camera teams better be really good).  I've told you the prices things will cost...you can find them for cheaper.  Just make sure you have a schedule that you stick to and those costs won't go up!

Other things to think about:  Dolly, jib, (these two are optional obviously, but surprisingly cheap!) diffusion, gels, black wrap, C-47s, camera tape, slate, boom pole...  Some of these things are small obviously but costs add up.  Recommend working on indie film sets and stealing everything you can (and by this I mean take what you can get away with, not outright steal ha ha).

And again, Phil is right.  Make a short or five first.  I can't recommend that enough.  Make a short with all the equipment I've described above.
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Andrew
Posted: July 13th, 2010, 8:19am Report to Moderator
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Got to back up Phil and Heretic, here and agree with James re: digital.

I recently worked on a short film, where we shot the first ten minutes of the feature script. At the end of the day, you can make a feature on a very small budget, of course, but if quality is the goal, then you are stretching as an inexperienced filmmaker. What we did was on a minimum budget with deferred payment, but the time and organisation required to show 10 minutes is huge. Times that by a feature, and you are asking for trouble. We had a DOP and his lighting crew walk out 'cos they were not being paid and the director was demanding for his shots. The lighting equipment took an age to set up and much was required. That is a problem. The people you will need to work for free will likely be giving up paid work. Definitely work with existing locations and make the script in as few locales as possible, though. Plan meticulously and then some. For a feature shoot, I cannot see you doing it in much under 20-30 days and that's before post-prod.

The best way to grow as a writer and filmmaker is to film, but it has to be done in a way that allows you and the story to grow. Clearly you realise this and it will stand you in good stead.

I am trying to write and produce something for this year's Tropfest but restricting the shoot to one location and 3-4 minutes.

I hope we're both successful.


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