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Filmmaking - Five Good Producer Skills
by Angela Taylor
You may believe a thorough knowledge
of filmmaking and the entertainment
industry is enough to make you a good
movie producer. While it certainly
helps to know the nuts and bolts of
movie production, and even the details
of financing and marketing a movie,
that knowledge is not enough to create
a good producer. It might make for a
good studio executive, or other job
out of the fray, but you need to
develop specific skills, to help you
make an independent film.
The first and most important skill you
need is organization. If you were the
kid who kept the minutes of the club
meetings, edited the yearbook, or
organized the prop-closet by era, you
already have this skill. It is
something that is hard to teach, but
you can certainly learn it, to become
more organized.
If you are the person who can’t find
his keys and has no idea how much is
in your checking account, you need
help. Get organized. There is simply
no substitute for it.
Buy a book about getting organized. I
recommend “How to Get Organized When
You Don’t Have The Time,” by Stephanie
Culp. http://snurl.com/gqg5 Or take a
Franklin - Covey course. Do whatever
you have to do, but get organized.
Second, you need to be able to make
decisions quickly. Despite the best
planning, things change
moment-to-moment during production.
You will have to decide right now
whether to set up the next shot
despite the looming storm clouds, or
to move on to another location,
completely disrupting the schedule.
The best way to develop this skill is
to completely bury your doubt. Know
that you are in charge, any mistakes
to be made are yours to make and you
will suffer the consequences of bad
decisions. If you act decisively, and
accept blame when necessary, your cast
and crew will accept your decisions
unquestioningly.
Third, you must be a good negotiator.
You will have to make deals for every
single thing on the set - the
equipment, the sets, the crew, the
film stock, everything. Even if you’re
borrowing your mom’s station wagon,
you will have to convince her you will
take good care of it, and return it
washed, and with a full tank of gas.
Everything will have to be negotiated.
When negotiating rates, know the
maximum you can pay for any one line
item on your budget and try to shave
20 or 30 percent off of it. If they
negotiate up, you may still save 15
percent or so off what you expected to
pay.
There is one thing you need to know
when negotiating: You can always say
no. If you can’t get the deal you
want, just say no. Practice it. No.
There is no need to be a jerk, just
make it clear that you will take your
business or offer elsewhere. If a crew
member doesn’t want to accept your day
rate, he doesn’t have to. You will
find someone else (assuming you set
your rate at a reasonable low-budget
level).
Fourth, a producer also needs
diplomacy. It’s surprising how often a
film shoot devolves into a third-grade
playground. In just a few short weeks,
cliques form, rumors start and
friendships are formed and ruined.
Crew members and actors will, believe
it or not, come tattle to you.
Sometimes you will have to intercede
in petty squabbles and personality
conflicts. The trick is to smooth
ruffled feathers while not making one
combatant feel like you’ve taken
another’s side. That will only set
factions against you, and that’s the
last thing you want on your set.
And fifth, of course, you will need
energy. Lots and lots of energy.
Caffeine helps to get you started
after only a few hours sleep, but it
is no substitute for real, healthy
human energy. One of the things you
must do during pre-production is get
yourself in shape for the rigorous
weeks of shooting. You’re in training,
not for a sprint, but for a marathon.
Working on lower budgets, independent
films often have a much tighter
schedule, making for longer days and
fewer days off. Take it seriously
beforehand, and train like a champion.
Exercise, eat healthy, and take
vitamins and supplements to build your
energy stores, so you can get through
it.
After you have these five basic
producer skills down, you will be
ready to develop your knowledge of the
filmmaking process and the
entertainment industry, by producing a
successful independent film.
Keywords: filmmaking, movies,
independent
About the Author
Angela Taylor, Hollywood CA USA
info@hollywoodseminars.com
Learn more about
filmmaking or movies or entertainment
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