scatterometry
I've learned through making movies the war and peace of indie film production can be either creative hell or creative heaven. It is cliché, but it is really all in a person's outlook on indie film production which it will be. Being unrealistic about what type of indie film you can make with a limited movie budget sets an aspiring filmmaker scatterometry up for creative hell.
I casually know one high strung filmmaker I run into once in a blue moon at a certain bar. The story never changes. They are producing this indie film scatterometry that is going to be a sweeping epic with a small army of a production crew and short list of rising talented actors for the lead role. I believe in going after your filmmaking dreams, but you also to be realistic.
The reality of their situation is they have a $50,000 budget, a 120 page script, the story is set in the 1940s during WWII and there is lots of on camera gun play. I ran into them a couple of weeks ago and they were in a shitty depressed mood.
They felt like a movie making failure because they couldn't make their indie film production happen. I tried my best to give them some positive words and tried to lift their spirits one indie filmmaker to another, but they were really in the dumps. What I was saying must have sounded like, "blah blah blah."
It wasn't my place to tell them trying to produce a 1940s period set in Italy during WWII on a $50,000 budget had indie film production let down written all over it. They were in creative hell torturing themselves for not being able to make their movie.
There was no point adding more negative gasoline to burning fire by telling them they way over shot their film budget creatively and the film really had no chance of being made.
Having too lofty goals for a film production you're movie budget can't handle is a bad spot for any filmmaker to be in. Misery loves company. In a last ditch effort to show compassion to a fellow filmmaker I told them about my worst indie film production mistakes and let downs.
The terrible time in my own filmmaking life when I totally let stress and worry dominate me during post-production of my first feature film. I had created a creative hell for myself.
Knowing that other people have fallen short of their creative mark did make them feel a little bit better. After talking they told me they were going to make a smaller film with a tighter script shot in the present day. I hope it works out for them.
I personally believe that many of us indie filmmakers sometimes create our own creative hells without knowing it. Making movies is stressful, personality conflicts on sets happen and technical problems are always lurking.
We don't need to let the negative things consume us so much that we fly off the handle over small film production problems, become rude jerks to other people on set or become paralyzed with self-doubt and fear. When you're in creative hell during indie film production the movie will suffer at all levels.
tag : scatterometry
I've learned through making movies the war and peace of indie film production can be either creative hell or creative heaven. It is cliché, but it is really all in a person's outlook on indie film production which it will be. Being unrealistic about what type of indie film you can make with a limited movie budget sets an aspiring filmmaker scatterometry up for creative hell.
I casually know one high strung filmmaker I run into once in a blue moon at a certain bar. The story never changes. They are producing this indie film scatterometry that is going to be a sweeping epic with a small army of a production crew and short list of rising talented actors for the lead role. I believe in going after your filmmaking dreams, but you also to be realistic.
The reality of their situation is they have a $50,000 budget, a 120 page script, the story is set in the 1940s during WWII and there is lots of on camera gun play. I ran into them a couple of weeks ago and they were in a shitty depressed mood.
They felt like a movie making failure because they couldn't make their indie film production happen. I tried my best to give them some positive words and tried to lift their spirits one indie filmmaker to another, but they were really in the dumps. What I was saying must have sounded like, "blah blah blah."
It wasn't my place to tell them trying to produce a 1940s period set in Italy during WWII on a $50,000 budget had indie film production let down written all over it. They were in creative hell torturing themselves for not being able to make their movie.
There was no point adding more negative gasoline to burning fire by telling them they way over shot their film budget creatively and the film really had no chance of being made.
Having too lofty goals for a film production you're movie budget can't handle is a bad spot for any filmmaker to be in. Misery loves company. In a last ditch effort to show compassion to a fellow filmmaker I told them about my worst indie film production mistakes and let downs.
The terrible time in my own filmmaking life when I totally let stress and worry dominate me during post-production of my first feature film. I had created a creative hell for myself.
Knowing that other people have fallen short of their creative mark did make them feel a little bit better. After talking they told me they were going to make a smaller film with a tighter script shot in the present day. I hope it works out for them.
I personally believe that many of us indie filmmakers sometimes create our own creative hells without knowing it. Making movies is stressful, personality conflicts on sets happen and technical problems are always lurking.
We don't need to let the negative things consume us so much that we fly off the handle over small film production problems, become rude jerks to other people on set or become paralyzed with self-doubt and fear. When you're in creative hell during indie film production the movie will suffer at all levels.
tag : scatterometry
