Let’s talk about no budget filmmaking. I prefer to call it
your budget. At the independent especially when you are starting out as a
director you wil be putting up your own money. And if you’re like me you hate
to waste your own money. This to me where learning to shoot your budget film
becomes crucial. It takes a while to get used to, but I’ve come up with a few
handy rules on how to do this.
What does the script call for?
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| Hanging out between takes |
I know in your vision of the script you have the couple
eating a beautiful dinner eating right off the river having a conversation by
the candlelight. And you plan to
crane into the scene. I know it would look amazing. I can see it. But it’s not
going to happen. All that really needs to happen is for people to have a conversation
over dinner. And unless the meal is important in the scene; all you really need
to film is two people having a conversation. Well, there is a million cheaper
ways to stage that. Perhaps at a location that is near another part of a day’s
filming. I know your thinking that isn’t your job. That the producers, or A.D,
or the Unit Production Manager will do. Sure, when you have a budget. But
remember this is your budget filmmaking, which means you don’t have a UPM
that’s your producer and why don’t you let them figure out the real problems
like how you are going to pay for all this. It is your job to reign yourself in
before you even get going.
I know you’re a director and you want to express your
vision. Let me beat that out of you right now. Your vision better reflect your
budget or else your film won’t get made. It comes down this. Your vision better
fit what you have. If you expect what you have to fit your vision then expect
not to work a lot. You will spend year riasing money to shoot a ten-minute film.
I don’t know about you but I love directing too much to do it as a hobby.
What Do You Have?
This is important to make a list off all the things you have
access to. Do you have an uncle that has a motor home that you can use as a
production truck? Is your dad a janitor at a hosipital who could sneak you into
a room to film? A brother that’s cop. Do you see where I am going with this?
Exhaust your resources. Make that list of everything you have access to and ask
everyone on your creative team to do the same. When you see what you have then
start creating your vision. Where’s the art in that? Well this isn’t art this
is your budge filmmaking. Art comes after. Besides limitations is freedom. One
of the best early short films I did came about because my mom was able to get
me access to her office for the weekend. Two milliom dollars of productuion
design for free.
Kill Your Baby
That is one of my favortie film expressions. And it is never
more true than on the independent your budget level. Kill your babies is that
ability to give up that dream shot you had because it will cause you from
shooting three other scenes that day. It’s the ability to say even though an
actor is great in the role their horrendous schedule is making your producer
bleed from their eyes. Guess what you are the leader and you might have to make
the hard decisions for the film. I know I might be painting a bleak picture of
filmmaking but it’s the truth and you know what? In the long run it’s
completely worth it. Don’t like the idea of losing control over your film. Try
to think of it in a biblical sense. Abraham was willing to kill his only son to
appease god. Well the film is god and you better do what he says.


