July 21 at 8:09am

The Good Machine No-Budget Commandments

Back in the day, before I had This is that, I had a production company called Good Machine. James Schamus and I founded it together, and we later partnered with David Linde. Mary Jane Skalski and Anthony Bregman were also partners, and we had the good fortune to work with a host of other talents including my later partners Anne Carey and Diana Victor, and Ross Katz, Glen Basner, Heta Paarte, Lamia Guelatti, Melinka Thompson-Gody, Jean Castelli, Kelly Miller, Dan Beers, Eric Papa, Jawal Nga, and many other later-legends to be.

As good as the films we made, as great as the individuals we got to collaborate with, we also had a genuine fondness for memos and how-to’s. If you come to my office these days, it looks like a FEMA site; we are going paperless, and I am sorting through the files, finding many choice nuggets. My madeleines.

One day, way back when, I went into to speak to a NYU grad class and I felt I would feel more substantive if I had something to hand out (btw I believe The Savages director, Tamara Jenkins was in that class). That was the start of the Good Machine No-Budget Commandments. James and I revised them here and there, and I am pretty sure, that Mary Jane and Anthony tossed more than a suggestion or two.

My surprise in reading them today is that no where do they say “The budget is the aesthetic.”  That had seemed like the mantra at times.  We get pretty close with #4, but not as dogmatic.

They hold up today. I still subscribe to the full set of notions.  Here they are, for your critique and comment, in their dusty glory.

1. Write to direct. A screenplay, especially a no-budget screenplay is a very loose blueprint for a film – ultimately every choice you make will compromise something else.

2. Write for what you know and for what you can obtain. This goes for actors, locations, animals, and major propping or set dressing. If your friend owns something, anything, write it into the film.

3. Remain flexible. Recognize the essential element in a scene and allow it to take place in a variety of locations or circumstances.

4. Choose an aesthetic that will capitalize on the lack of money (i.e. period anachronisms, monochromatic color schemes, etc.). Invest meaning in everyday commonplace things – make an orange a totemic object John Ford would be proud of.

5. Don’t over strive. Don’t try to show how much production value you have (you don’t have it, so you’ll either fail or unbalance your film). A film that people say is “well produced” usually means that the story didn’t have much going for it. Keep the story aligned with the budget.

6. Don’t limit yourself to too few locations – it’s a dead give away of lack of dollars. I like the number eight.

7. Use everything more than once. You’ve already paid for it, so use it, use it, use it.

8. Write for a very limited audience – your closest friends. Do not try to please anyone – crowd pleasing costs.

9. Write to cut it back later. You can trim to subtlety.

10. Contradict the above commandment and only write what you know you absolutely must shoot.

11. Keep it simple. You can learn how to do the impossible on your next film. No dogs. No babies. “Business” is expensive. Keep it controllable.

12. Keep it intimate. Dialogue and close ups are cheap.

13. Make the most of a day’s work. It’s easier to get a commitment for one day than it is for a week. Exploit people’s willingness to give a day.

14. Ignore everything listed above if it doesn’t further the story.

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  • Jason
    - Avoid large night exteriors, if possible. These shots always add crew and equipment to the day.

    - Try and shoot on city / municipal owned property as much as possible. Always cheaper.
  • MARK11
    Just...thank you, thank you.

    I'm one of those writer-directors...who is just so glad I'm living in the digital age.
    So many walls are breaking down left and right, but it still comes down to me
    doing the work first and foremost, especially in pre production:

    write and rewrite
    storyboard
    digital camera and lighting tests
    digital editing software tests -- see what I can clean up in post
    long before I even have a table read, let alone cast

    Table reads
    More rewrites
    More storyboards
    More camera, lighting and editing software tests

    Ignore all the film only people
    Ignore the experienced crew only people
    Open doors for unknown, raw talented but hard working
    actors/actresses, digital image makers and crew workers

    Give them all a piece of the gross pie

    Create website for project TRAILERS, SHORTS, etc.
    I'm telling stories for the same audience I come from.

    Simply, write on...right on.

    MARK11
  • Hankblumenthal
    You gave a version of this to my SVA students years ago - and I still use a battered old xerox in my production class at Georgia Tech!
  • John Bush
    This is timeless advice offering a good insight into the process.
  • Those who have already made a movie have likely learned these commandments the hard way. Those who haven't yet made their movie will probably think they're immune to them. Ha, just wait.

    About the time Ted Hope made "Happiness" I jumped onto the new digital bandwagon, buying a miniDV camcorder, a used boom pole and a mic from Radio Shack. Set out to write and shoot a little 10-minute showcase video with two characters called GEEZERS. When it was finished it was a mini-epic with 29 locations, including a pivotal scene at an active turnpike toll booth, and half the movie took place in 1939 with cars and costumes. Talk about breaking the no-budget rules!

    Well we shot it in 6 days for $1,000, mostly spent on food and an insurance bond required by the state to let us shut down the toll booth for filming. It's no Avatar, but I'm still proud of it. The digital files have held up, and I am completing a restoration of it in widescreen, adding in some previously deleted scenes, and finally doing the color correction I always wanted but didn't have the computing power to do until now.

    http://www.writerdirector.com/index.php/watch-geezers-online

    So I'm a firm believer in memorizing the first 13 commandments, but living by No. 14!
  • I will use as many of these as I can on my next feature. Depending on how it works out, "Olive & Mocha" may just give you a thank you on the credits!
  • LOVE it!

    We broke #6 but our story works with few locations. I'm REALLY digging this it's a MUST SHARE for the financially-challenged. After all, #11 says it best so I can stop talking NOW.

  • ericbuist
    I was laughing quite a bit at most of these points, simply because I could easily think of a short film I made that used at least one of them. Great to see a list like this though!
  • nwrann
    #4, #5 and #8 went a long way toward helping my 2nd feature, Burning Inside, be a success. Of course I've ignored #2 on too many occasions, including my current project.
  • mrbarnard
    When I tell everybody that I wrote a script that violates all the rules of indie filmmaking (and I do tell EVERYBODY that), THESE ARE THOSE RULES! Awesome. I love them. I've stuck to them before. I wish I could've written a great script that fit them. Damn me, I couldn't. A FATHER AND SON violates every one of the rules, except No. 14.
  • This is the most useful thing you've written here. It's hard not to look at a low budget and not feel sick with what's not possible, so it's very nice to see such a positive way of looking at low budget. I'd love to see more stuff from your days at Good Machine.
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