Categories
Truly Free Film

From “Filmmaking the Hardway”: Distributor Negotiation & Delivery

Below is the second of two excerpts from Filmmaking, the Hard Way by Josh Folan. A cynical case study of the feature film production of All God’s CreaturesFilmmaking, the Hard Way puts low budget filmmaking under the microscope by analyzing the process of making a film from top to bottom.  

So all the blood, sweat and tears that have went into making this film of yours has just careened into the brick wall of an offer for a distribution deal?  That’s it!  We’ve done it!  The Holy Grail of a small independent film is within our grasp!  Get my mom on the phone while I pick out what shade of laser red Lamborghini I’m gonna buy, where do I sign?!?!

Hold your horses, cowboy.  A PDF contract in your inbox that you don’t really understand is no reason to get mom on the horn.  Assuming you’ve already done your homework and you know whether the company is worth their salt based on an aggregate opinion of filmmakers they have worked with, past and present, there are still a number of factors that need to be weighed and negotiated before jumping on board with a distributor.  Major deal points you need to be concerned with at this level are listed below, and by “this level” I mean you need to understand a micro-budget feature with no large talent draw has virtually no profit potential in a theatrical release, and that the old filmmaker adage that theatrical play will drive ancillary sales is also a pipe dream.  We’re talking DVD, television and VOD dollars here, you dreamer, you.

:: Term.  The low side you’ll likely find here is seven years, standards fall anywhere in between there and ten years, and perpetuity is not out of the question.  Whatever the length you settle on, understand it’s going to be a long time and that you will have to work with this company (barring their bankruptcy – not uncommon in the distribution industry) and, more importantly, the people running it for the life of the contract.  Tensions tend to arise in even the best of filmmaker-distributor dynamics, so if you don’t like who you’re dealing with from the get-go, you’ll really hate them when all that red starts rolling in on those quarterly statements.

:: Territory.  The world is divided up into a slew of distribution territories, and you don’t necessarily need to sign them all away on any one deal.  The most simplistic of divisions on a US deal is domestic and foreign, the combined of which is termed worldwide.  What’s appropriate for you and your film is dependent on your situation.  If your film, for any number of potential reasons (cast, producer relationships, subject matter), has strong prospects in a particular territory, it might be wise to negotiate that out of a worldwide deal offer.  

Categories
Truly Free Film

From “Filmmaking the Hardway”: Seeking Distribution & Approaching Film Markets

Below is the first of two excerpts from Filmmaking, the Hard Way by Josh Folan. A cynical case study of the feature film production of All God’s CreaturesFilmmaking, the Hard Way puts low budget filmmaking under the microscope by analyzing the process of making a film from top to bottom.  

Effect:

All God’s Creatures, with no “stars”, created by “unknown” filmmakers, and produced with less than $25k to work with is picked up for distribution in late 2011.  By May 2012 it can be purchased through the biggest retailer in the known universe (Walmart) and numerous other retail outlets.

Cause:

:: Make a movie. Preferably a good one with a unique and interesting story, compelling characters, and a few commercial sales tools (sex, nudity, gore, comedy, super heroes – that sort of thing).  Seems an obvious step, yet it is quite often overlooked.  Particularly the “good” part.I hear inexperienced producer say things akin to “it’s a so-so horror script, but I just want to get a feature made” with alarming frequency, and it’s no surprise at all how much unwatchable schlock ends up getting made as a result of that lackluster intention.  If you don’t have something unique about your film to passionately pitch to distributors when you finally get a few to listen to you, why the hell would they invest their time and money trying to create an audience for it?

:: Formulate a pitch. An airtight one that doesn’t sound like anything you’ve read anywhere else, and DEFINITELY not any of that “Terminator meets Christmas Vacation” shit. If you get an acquisitions executive on the phone and you sputter out one of those for your little movie – that does not have a Schwarzenegger, Chevy Chase, or even an Uncle Eddie – it will be the last time you speak with that particular individual.  My pitch with AGC was that “it boiled down to a dark, twisted love story between these two really fucked up people – a serial killer and a prostitute. And while a story like this would typically zero in on those elements, the killing and the sex, ours aims to make those things ancillary because of the focus on the love story.”  Yes, you will get very sick of hearing yourself repeat your airtight pitch…over and over and over and over.  And over.And…over.  That is, if you do the amount of legwork that will be required to actually convince a distribution professional that investing in your little film is worthwhile.

:: Make a pretty PDF.A press kit.  These days this means an EPK (Electronic Press Kit), of which your pretty PDF will be a part of.  The EPK will contain the numerous clever/mysterious/hilarious teasers and trailers that you have created to market your film with, your jaw-dropping original key art, any press interview video clips you had the foresight to arrange while filming the movie, any press clippings/screenshots that pertain to the film, the countless production stills, as well as the press kit PDF itself.  Try to streamline all your marketing tools with the same look and feel – brand awareness and recognition is marketing 101.