Hi Guys,
Apologies for posting this and only getting back to the thread today.
I've carefully read through what you guys have said, and can I say that I think I actually agree with all of you. Perhaps not on everything, but on all the main points raised.
On Health and Safety.
My book explains the importance of health and safety, on release forms, permissions, having qualified people to perform specialist roles, risk assessments... We cover it all.
I do consider those things to be critical, and you guys are right when you highlight the horrible errors and situations that have occurred in the past. I think books like mine actually stand to educate and enforce this, rather than dismiss it and hope people don't do it...
However... It doesn't neccessarily go hand in hand with "money". Archibald14 is absolutely correct with what he says. People are free to make the films they wish to make, and to creatively express themselves. My book isn't about making action films (nor is it about not making action films). I'm not encouraging people to dive from buildings onto buses Mariachi-style... A film could be a single location with three characters talking, or it could be a comedy with forty characters in eighty scenes... I'm also not telling people they have to make a film for nothing, but I am offering solutions as to how they can save money and think creatively to maximise their budget.
Where many of us work for a living in the film industry, there is a growing population of emerging talent who wish to make films, just to make films. Many of these guys will have better output by learning from this book. It also serves as a useful tool to more experienced filmmakers who wish to make a more traditional film that has it eyes on genuine distribution.
I don't want to ever discourage anyone, or tell someone they can't try to achieve something, based on background, circumstance or budget. But yes, I would never encourage people to do anything unsafe, see the earlier paragraph.
You can't get all of that into a title, but I'll do my best to get it on the book blurb and marketing once live.
On "El Mariachi"... I know Carlos and I would dispute a lot of what has been said here. It's true that the film we see isn't the $7000 one that was shot, but Robert entirely covers this in his book. It's not skirted past. The majority of "Rebel Without a Crew" is his journey after the film has been shot.
My words now, not Carlos/Robert's, but there is no limit on what you can pay people. To think there is, is *beep* There is only an issue when you say you're offering one thing and then you go back on it or cheat. On a professional production, obviously there are businesses, minimum wages, unions and all sorts of considerations. However, it's not 1985 and there is a massive number of hobbiests and emerging filmmakers making films with pocket money. If they want to ask friends and local emerging actors to work with them, they're entirely able to. If they want to offer a limited amount, a future percentage, or nothing at all - good luck to them. As long as the other people involved know the score and it's all signed, that's fine.
A good analogy is professional sport. Here, in the UK, a top soccer player can earn $350,000 a week playing soccer. I also play soccer, for fun with friends. We pay to play. I'm not an elite soccer player, I never will be, but I enjoy it and am happy with this arrangement. This all applies to the above. It's only an issue when people are abused/cheated and I cover this throughly in my book.
On El Mariachi... That cost $7000 to make, but it was an action film and it was shot on film. It did costs thousands to improve, but it wouldn't with today's tech. With modern equipment, tech and the internet, it's an entirely different game now. We will see more and more excellent indie product, but success wil also shift from being bought by Hollywood to also simply making a living doing what you love.
So, I actually agree with all of the key points raised above. I'd like to think I'm being a positive influence in re-enforcing them. The alternative is to just ignore these things and hope emerging filmmakers don't get things wrong.
Thanks,
Andy
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