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July 9, 2008

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Letters

Runaway Production No Laughing Matter

In Moviemaker’s “10 Best Cities in North America for Independent Moviemakers,” (Issue 49, Vol. 10) Ruba Nadda states “Torontonians are laughing because we see the CNN tower.” Well, as a freelance grip who worked on three features and several shorts in 2002, I’d like Ms. Nadda to know that we here in Chicago aren’t laughing. We’re starving. We know damn well that if it weren’t for runaway movies, we’d be number one (okay, at least number three) on MM’s Top 10. On the bright side, nobody—and I mean nobody—can spot a faux (not to mention, stupid-looking) cityscape as the moviegoing public in the proud city of Chicago.

Keep up the great work at MM magazine. Let’s hope the industry prevails for all American film crews in 2003.

—Jerry ‘daGrip’ Foreman, Chicago, IL

MM Film School 101

I love the article you did about the Pro8mm camera (Issue 49, Vol. 10). I just started my own film company, here in the small town of Puyallup, Washington. My son is working to be a director, and I’ve wanted to get him the right camera. Your article has helped me to make the right choice.

Your magazine has really been a wonderful learning tool for me. I’ve wanted to go to New York to learn film, but the financing is beyond what I have at the moment, so I’m learning on my own. Your magazine is the best thing I’ve found. Thanks!

—Marie Moren, Reel Life Productions, Puyallup, WA

Getting Down to Business

In Walter J. Coady’s article “Your Film: Blockbuster Hit… or Lawsuit-in-Waiting?” (Issue 49, Vol. 10), the writer states that “Technically, a title can’t be copyrighted unless it’s a series such as The Hobbit or Tarzan.”

That is incorrect. There is no “unless” concerning copyrighting a title. A title cannot be copyrighted. Period. There are various other protections available for titles, but copyrighting a title is specifically prohibited by law.

He further states that “It’s impossible to distribute a film without insurance, since distributors require it.” It is certainly not impossible to distribute a film without insurance, only foolish (much like it’s not impossible to drive a car without insurance).

While E&O insurance is a normal deliverable, if a distributor wants a film badly enough—and the producer has no money to buy it—the distributor will provide their own insurance. Of course, the article was written by a guy who sells insurance, which is why he glosses over things before getting down to the business he does know.

—David Stephens

Indie Film’s Class War

Your Fall, 2002 issue (Issue 48, Vol. 9) is a testament to the class war raging within the independent community. On the one hand were the excellent articles like Steve Hamilton’s “Digital Post-Production Democracy,” which cites the new demographics of film festivals entrants; and John Gaspard and Dale Newton’s “The Dos and Don’ts of DV Moviemaking” and Eric Sherman’s “So You Want to Direct Movies,” both of which cite the importance of story over format and film school stylistics.

On the other hand were David Geffner’s “The Indie Distribution Crisis,” lamenting the crisis in theatrical distribution for independent (art) films and Shelley Friedman’s interview with Ray Carney, in which Carney blasts the “special interest demographics” of gays, blacks and feminists for getting all the distribution deals rightfully reserved for art films made by white upper-middle-class, academic straight men like himself.

It is ironic that Geffner pronounces “the” independent film community as being in a distribution crisis at the precise moment when so many of us in Carney’s “special interest demographic” categories are celebrating the virtual explosion of our microbudget independent movies on the shelves of Blockbuster, and the solid growth of the direct-to-video distributors which put them there. Most of these movies have never been near a festival, and their producers and directors have never appeared between the covers of trade magazines like MM. I find this omission singular. After all, don’t we all make movies?

The producers of independent art films need to acknowledge that theirs is but a single star in the constellation of independent movies. The “artists” seeking “self expression in film” will soon have to accept that they own nothing more than their own genre: not the entire independent movie phenomenon, the motion picture medium or the exclusive right to define and employ “art.”

Do small and independent book publishers measure their health by the success of only their “literary” authors? Of course not. It would stand to reason then, that the “artists” and academics among us not pronounce a galactic apocalypse just because their particular star happens to have gone dim.

—Beverly Garside, Odenton, MD

MovieMaker’s Influence

Dear Tim,

I’m not sure if you will remember me or not, but I thought it would be a good time to write you after receiving MM’s Winter 2003 issue. Your notebook editorial covering, among other things, why the independent film industry will survive was of particular interest.

The article “Jousting at the Moon for Fun and Profit” helped me explore the reason I continue to write screenplays and make short films, while at the same time understanding the motivations of others (which are as many and varied as the individuals themselves).

There was a time when I was angry about how little people realize or appreciate the work and expense involved in making a film. I thought I was good enough to make it in the industry, only to find that I wasn’t half as good as I thought I was—and only knew a tenth of what I needed to (however, I am an “award winning moviemaker” ;-).

Today, I’m quite happy to write (as it’s the least expensive aspect of the filmmaking process), and when I feel passionate enough about one of my stories, I begin the arduous task of conducting all the necessary pre-planning. Assembling the cast and crew needed to just make a short film (a broad stroke on a small canvas, if you will) is in itself a feat.

No ambition exists in me to make money at filmmaking anymore (not that I couldn’t use it if you have any lying around), and now I only make movies for the love of the art and challenge to improve at the craft. I can only hope that one of my projects will inspire and move someone in the way others have moved me. Filmmaking is a cathartic process that helps me understand myself better and a magic carpet ride to a more rewarding and gratifying life.

I can’t thank you and your staff at MM enough for all of the valuable information and knowledge I have gained from reading your magazine, and the richness that it has brought to my life.

—Wayne Baimbridge, Hollywood, CA

Everybody Got a Stake in Hungry Hearts

I’m Timothy E. Wurtz. With Glenn M. Benest, I co-wrote and co-produced the film Hungry Hearts. I am responding to the article “The Making of Hungry Hearts,” written by Glenn and published in MM in Summer, 2002 (Issue 47, Vol. 9).

I would like to correct the impression that Glenn did all the work by himself. The facts of the piece are correct, but all along the way Glenn had a full-time partner. He and I began writing together in the early 1980s and continued to do so through the production and post-production of Hungry Hearts. In addition to my extensive work on the screenplay,
I was also the on-set producer of the film.

Glenn and I first discussed the notion of producing a low-budget “festival film” in the mid-1990s. I began work on the screenplay in 1997, and the final credits for the film are: Written by Glenn M. Benest & Timothy E. Wurtz; Produced by Glenn M. Benest, Timothy E. Wurtz, Hagai Shaham.

—Timothy E. Wurtz, Valley Village, CA

Fear and Loathing in Los Angeles

MovieMaker—please, if you’ve got one tiny testicle amongst you, print this letter:

For the second time in a year you dismissed LA as a second rate indie film town. Last year it was fourth, this year seventh or eighth, behind places like Philadelphia and Austin, Texas—ha ha ha. It’s sad that there are so many suckers that believe your terrible, attitude-driven lies, but here’s the truth everybody: LA is a great place for indie film! And I’ll tell you why.

I just made a feature with 35 SAG actors and it cost me $14,000. No lie, no exaggeration. How did I do it? The glut of talent in LA is astonishing. There are so many people who want to work in every facet—acting, producing, writing, directing and, just in general, helping. Everybody worked for free with percentages in the film (outside the AD and the soundman, who worked for peanuts).

People come to LA to be in the industry, and nowhere in the world do you have such a wealth of talent and hunger to create film. LA, for a metropolis. is also a relatively inexpensive city. It’s too big to be contained, unlike New York and San Francisco. It’s not maxed out, so you can always find alternatives to all expenses. If one grocery store won’t give it to you for free, another one will. It’s also so big that the whole city can’t be jaded by the industry. I didn’t pay for one location except $20 for a public golf course—and they let us stay all day.
Here’s another factor: weather and location. We have city, vertical and horizontal; we have suburbia (lord knows we have suburbia); we have mountains, desert, snow, beaches, ocean, lakes, forest and 72 degree weather the whole year except summer. Hey, MM, why don’t you go to Chicago and shoot an indie in January and let us know how you liked the “lake effect.”

Wall Street runs New York; Hollywood runs LA. That means equipment stores and rental stores are a dime a dozen, and willing to be incredibly competitive if you shop around. How many choices do you really have in Austin, Texas?

And here’s the last thing: In LA you can fake Toronto, Vancouver and New York, but you can’t fake LA in any of those places. The reason MM trashes us is because when you live in LA, you’re not allowed to like it. You have to pine for all the places the transplants came from and will never go back to. The posturing of the self-loathing Angeleno is a strange phenomenon, but believe me, some of us do like it here. And many of us—the MM staff included—have taken great advantage of it.

—Adam White, 4th Park Films, Los Angeles, CA

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MovieMaker Magazine

Magazine cover: Spring 2003This story was published in the Spring 2003 MovieMaker Magazine. The headline was:

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It’s Official—Pre-production Begins

“I never ask people for permission to make a film. Instead, I present them with the fact that I’m making a film. If they’re wise, they’ll get in on it early.”
—Francis Ford Coppola


Last week our unit production manager for Rufus Rex officially started work and I paid UPS an astounding amount of money to deliver a letter to the Republic of Georgia officially inviting our lead actress to the United States. We’re also officially in pre-production on the grassroots (my preferred term, since I dislike “microbudget”—no art should be defined by its budget) movie Rufus Rex, which my 15-year-old son, Nick, and I wrote together last winter.

Posted 07.8.08 | Grassroots Moviemaker | No comments yet...

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