Get a DSLR like a Canon T3i or T5i. It should include an 18-55mm "kit" lens for about the price you mentioned and will give you manual exposure control, which is a must.
Unfortunately, to get really high quality images and sound, you're going to have to invest some more money in more things than just a camera. You're going to need to purchase a couple LED lights, with orange color gels to color-correct them to incandescent light if you're shooting indoors (around $200) and at least one video mic (I've heard good things about the Rode) with a long, maybe 20-foot, 1/8" mini cable to get the mic close to any actors speaking to capture close presence in the audio (around an additional $200).
Then, of course, editing software, to piece the shots together and do the sound mix. You'll probably be able to get by, at first, with basic editing software that comes with any PC or Mac, like Mac's iMovie.
Read books on PHOTOGRAPHY as well as filmmaking, since quality of the image is what you're concerned about and is why you're here on this board. Learn the basics of 2 and 3-point lighting, composition and depth-of-field. Then, in CINEMATOGRAPHY books, learn about using lighting to create different types of DRAMATIC effects, and how different camera ANGLES make a subject appear meek or powerful, for example.
Have fun and good luck!
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