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Truly Free Film

Why Is The Film Biz SOOOOO Slow To Change?

 

The Road To Change Is Hard To Find…

 

I know many of you recognize that the writing is on the wall.  Filmmakers have to stop planning first and foremost to bring their work to  market at film festivals or elsewhere.  The entire industry needs to get off of the single product focus and justify greater value in cinema in general.  Release patterns need to change.  We need to think of story worlds and long term relationships.  The end of the era of feature film dominance is inevitable.  The list goes on. And on. And on.

I certainly have done my share of list making, be it Best Practices for today, or what is currently wrong with the film biz.  I think such lists can save us — provided we are willing to not just behave passively but heed the call to action. And I am not alone standing on my soap box.  But if things are clearly broken why is change within the film biz not more evident?

Allow me to start with a list of what once where ten factors, and continues to grow…

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These Are Those Things

You Too Will Be Glad You Moved Here

“Fog is cool” I said to myself as I stumbled in from a weekend nosh of idiosyncratic food and drink.  Diverse places and people in a city nestling with nature.  It sure isn’t NYC — and that’s a good thing.  I took it as an omen that this video popped up as I thought of my wife  soon joining me here in my new home.  Change is a wonderful thing, particularly positive change and the joy of having someone to share it with.

How great would it be if San Francisco was the Indie Film Hub, and this time instead of a group of aspiring artists and entrepreneurs trying to make it, it emerged as a true community that knew that it had to work together, amassing and learning from mistakes, forever aiming to make deeply resonate work, regardless of individual authorship, work that celebrates the expansive aspects of life today, doesn’t shy away from complexity or lack of comfort, and is based on exploration far more than declaration.  Ah, a person can dream….

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Let's Make Better Films Truly Free Film

10+ Things To Think About If You Want To Make Better Films

(photo by Ted, art from the street)
(photo by Ted, art from the street)

I watch a lot of films. I think I watch about 250 a year. I also watch a lot of films that never come out, that most audiences never get access to.

I learn a great deal from the “noble failures”, the films that have ambition but just miss the mark fully in execution. I honestly like these films and find pleasure in watching them, but I also know that most people like their entertainment and culture to be in a more perfectly realized state — even if most of us don’t have the resources to bring our work to that state. I think most people’s taste is shaped by their training; we learn to like what we get — unfortunately.

Yet I also think there are some things that

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Let's Make Better Films

Can We All Improve How We Do What We Do?

Can we and the people we work with actually get better at the things we do?  And can we get better, faster?  Are there things that we can do for each other that might expedite the process?  How do we transcend the plague of doing well enough?

On low-budget indie film shoots, the collaborators are of a wide range of experience levels.  Such  films are also chronically plagued by a paucity of funds and time.  Too much to get done, and not enough resources to really get it done perfectly, or sometimes even just well.  With a hundred things needing to happen at any given time, your head will pop if you concern yourself with everything that goes wrong.  It does seem like those that often do best are those that have learned not to sweat the petty, or perhaps some sort of zen-esque understanding of the world (that is combined with the sort of hyper-focus of concentration in the things that make all the difference — and that will some other post further down the line).

The Serenity Prayer that Alcoholics Anonymous has adopted always seems fit as a method to manage the creative chaos that defines most film production.  Granted, I get some criticism in life for having too great expectations of people and things, believing always that one time we all will hit our high point, but I really think by dropping our ego, finding a way to point out what can be done better, explaining the reasons why, we can rise to the occasion and one day truly get it all in sync and do beautiful work.  I want us to do more and to do it better, myself included.  Let me get to that, but first, I think it’s worth looking beyond the first three lines of the Serenity Prayer, and look at the rest of it:

Serenity to accept things we cannot change,
Courage to change the things we can, and the
Wisdom to know the difference
Patience for the things that take time
Appreciation for all that we have, and
Tolerance for those with different struggles
Freedom to live beyond the limitations of our past ways, the
Ability to feel your love for us and our love for each other and the
Strength to get up and try again even when we feel it is hopeless.
This post is about how to have the courage to change the things we can.  Let’s assume we recognize what those things are.  What do we do to get them changed?

Many times on film sets, I see folks hesitant to say what they feel, not wanting to complain, not wanting to demand that things are better.  When things are sloppy or unsafe or could be handled in a better manner that will most likely yield a better result: SAY SOMETHING.  Don’t be cruel, but be direct.  Explain, why you think it will work better if they did something differently.  Speak of the result you want to obtain.  But speak up.  Maybe you have to pause and wait for the right time to be truly heard, but speak up.

And when they don’t get it right, take action.  Step in, get it done, and recognize when you have to make a change.  Be it a director or a producer, if I have heard it once, I have heard it a 100 times: “whenever I considered firing someone, I end up always wishing that I had done it then and there, and when I haven’t done it, I always regret it.”  Under the right circumstances, people can learn from those mistakes.  What are the right circumstances that help us all learn?