View Full Version : Helping Hands from 2011


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Wayz Vaydiakteve
March 11th, 2011, 05:52 AM
No problem at all. And I'll talk to you through the email then.

Jeff Brewer
March 12th, 2011, 07:22 AM
Our business has been growing over the past few months and we are excited to announce the need of a part-time videographer to join our team in helping create lasting memories. The position is currently required primarily on weekends, with a few weekdays as an exception. Our style of wedding videography is unique and requires a strong passion to not only shoot great video, but create a strong connection with our clients.

We are located in Greensboro, NC and the potential candidate should be local to this area or willing to travel. Skills needed for this position include knowledge of using HD and ENG cameras in manual mode to acquire quality images, ability to use professional audio equipment to capture superb sound, and a friendly personality to maintain relationships with our clients. In addition to these, you should know how to properly frame a subject, create new and unique shots, and capture quick moments. Our team utilizes DSLR cameras and someone with knowledge of these cameras would be highly preferred. Also, having prior knowledge or experience of wedding videography is a huge plus, but not required.

Weddings can often prove to be difficult and stressful, since there are no second takes and the job must be done correct the first time, so you need to be aware and capable of managing tough situations. If you are interested in applying, please call the number 336-298-1401. We will not accept or qualify any emails sent in regards to the job opening, so call 336-298-1401 to apply.

Bjørn Sørensen
March 14th, 2011, 04:05 AM
for a one day job shooting footage for a corporate movie.

Bjørn

Bjørn Sørensen
March 14th, 2011, 01:51 PM
case closed

Bjørn Sørensen
March 16th, 2011, 09:21 AM
case closed

Gabor Heeres
March 17th, 2011, 09:55 AM
This is an urgent news-related call. One of my main clients is in need of a cameraguy for tomorrow morning in the Luton Area. He or she needs to be fully self supporting as we do not have time to fly in a reporter. We need 5-10 exterior B-roll shots in St.Albans and a short 3-question quote/interview with a lawyer in Stevenage (questions will be provided). This newsjob will take less than 30 minutes at each location. You will be finished before 1 PM. Footage needs to be delivered via FTP before 4 PM in SD Mpeg-2 format, 8,5 Mbps, 16:9 widescreen, upper field first.

Payment via IBAN within 14 days will be GBP 450 including all expenses, no surcharges, no VAT charged. Any HD/SD camera with PD-170/XL2 quality or better can do the job, external lavmic/reportermic required. Somebody in the area who can help us out? Contact me via info[at]sqvision[dot]nl

Gabor Heeres
March 18th, 2011, 12:45 AM
Unfortunately no responses, it's too late now. Thanks all anyway

Dano Motley
March 18th, 2011, 09:28 PM
tried to rent media mix for a green screen project last summer. His price included the cost of the expensive green screen paint for his white cyctarama. way out of his mind...

Bjørn Sørensen
March 21st, 2011, 09:17 AM
For an upcoming production we are searching for a professional videographer in Norway. Location is Ålesund. We need someone with a good eye and all equipment necessary to make technically and creatively perfect video, 1080/25p.

John C. Plunkett
March 24th, 2011, 11:35 AM
Finding a crew that will work for free isn't unheard of. It can still happen to this day. In fact, I recently finished playing assistant editor and audio mixer for a short web vignette created to help raise money for a feature-length film. My co-worker and his friend operated cameras on the shoot and other friends of the director helped out with field audio, lighting and general wrangling, gaffing, what-not. None of us got paid, but we enjoyed helping out.

I realize a feature-length project is much different, but I've done a lot of post work for free for friends and associates and never mind helping out when I have the time. There are plenty of people out there who enjoy working on movie projects, you just have to keep looking. Anyone who tells you a crew must get paid has been a part of the professional side of things for too long. There are always people out there who will surprise you with their generosity. Don't give up the search.

James Houk
March 25th, 2011, 06:13 AM
By no means was I trying to suggest that ti's impossible to find a crew to work for free, even a good one. What does apply though is the old adage : "Quick, Cheap, Good - pick two."

In terms of a feature project, the scope of the project and the length of the commitment is what becomes the issue, and that's why doing a good job of treating your crew well is very important.

Chad Whelan
March 25th, 2011, 07:58 AM
I need someone with wedding experience to shoot a small destination wedding on the beach in St. Pete Beach Florida Thursday April 28th, 6 - 7:30 timeframe. Must be HD of some sorts. Contact me for more details please.

Chad
727-345-9898

Sean Cloutier
March 27th, 2011, 10:29 PM
"Don't give up the search." Thanks John!

I didn't give up the search and I now have a team of 6 (behind the camera). I have three more on standby that are willing to pitch in if any of the original 6 don't make it.

I'm very fortunate that it worked out this way. It takes more work, yes. But I'm glad I went this direction. I have a dedicated team.

... now all I have to do is get some of those snotty actors.

:-)

Andy Graham
March 28th, 2011, 12:51 AM
.. now all I have to do is get some of those snotty actors.

are there any other kind ;)

good work on gathering a team, it didn't take you very long.

Paul R Johnson
March 28th, 2011, 08:24 AM
The problem seems to be that you're trying to get crews from sources where a freebie generates temper tantrums. I mod a theatre forum where the same thing happens - we started a low/no pay area for these kind of projects, but it still generates tons of bad feeling. Here in the UK we have a national minimum page law, and it got so bad that people were reporting worthy projects because they were asking for skilled people, rather than keen amateurs, and as such, are indeed circumventing a law designed to protect people. Even if they wish to work for free, it's very difficult.

The problem is also that pros are very often totally uninterested in the product - so pay is a necessity, because they don't see any personal benefit in doing it for free. I still do the occasional freebie if the project really interests me - but that's the problem. The various internet lists are for crew who make a living out of the industry - totally independent of the product. Do they actually care if the programme gets viewers? No - nothing to do with them. Keen amateurs may even have better production values, but might take longer or not produce the result you want.

Very difficult choices.

Ervin Farkas
March 28th, 2011, 02:28 PM
I need a videographer to shoot a few short monologues (a couple of minutes each) and then the event itself, about one hour.

Have at least a semi-pro 16x9 SD camera on solid tripod, one lav mike with long cable or wireless. Also take with you a digital photo camera. Shoot and give me the footage & stills.

Location is in the Dunwoody - Sandy Springs area, approximate time: 2-4 PM this Saturday, 2nd of April.

Please PM me here or look up my phone on my website FarkasVideo dot com.

Thank you,

Kelly Langerak
March 29th, 2011, 09:52 AM
Hi, I'm a DSLR Videographer here in the Bay Area. I mostly do weddings and some corporate work. I'm looking for good opportunities to work with you if you are very experienced in your field. I've only done a handful of projects with folks that have more experience then I do, so I have very little real training. I have a solid reel if you need to see it.

Looking to gain more experience in Weddings, Lighting and Audio as well as small to big corporate gigs.

Hit me up with your next project.

Stu Siegal
March 29th, 2011, 02:03 PM
I'm looking for a single cam, two person crew, wireless lav & mixer, Sony EX1 or similar, for two half days, 5/15 & 5/16, shooting a speaker addressing a live medical conference in Honolulu. I’ll be bringing a drive & laptop to take back footage on.

Pretty straightforward gig, if you can get me back a quote ASAP, much appreciated, need to get a quote to my client.

Oren Arieli
March 30th, 2011, 10:30 PM
Have you considered joining the Bay Area Professional Videographer's Association? Bay Area Professional Videographers Association (BAPVA): Welcome (http://www.BAPVA.com). There are 70 active professionals who meet once a month for educational conferences, hands-on demonstrations, and networking. Getting yourself known within the group means that others can call upon you when the right opportunity arises.
I'm the President of the organization. Stop by and say hi at a future meeting.

Dror Levi
March 31st, 2011, 10:05 AM
Looking for someone that has some experience in the events industry.
If you use a DSLR it is even better.
I have a gig for this coming Sunday.

Garrett Low
March 31st, 2011, 12:48 PM
Hi all,

I'm in the same situation, looking for more corporate and commercial work. It's a matter of networking like Oren eluded to. I've looked into joining BAPVA but unfortunately they are a south bay group and I'm up int the north bay so I wouldn't be able to attend most of their functions. Any ideas for north of SF?

Thanks,
Garrett

Mat Thompson
March 31st, 2011, 04:23 PM
Hi there - Check out Per Johan - video-film.no (http://www.video-film.no/)

He does mostly wildlife but he's a flawless technician and I'm sure would do a good job for what you want !

Oren Arieli
March 31st, 2011, 08:16 PM
I know it's a bit of a trip from Novato, but we've got Berkley, San Ramon, Livermore and even Sacramento members. It might be worth your while to join if only to be a part of the active forum where we seek out "helping hands", share information, tips and tricks, and help solve each others problems.
The $125/year to join can be easily made up in your first paying gig through the group. Just a thought.
BTW, I don't work on commissions from recruiting, in case you were wondering.

Oren Arieli
March 31st, 2011, 08:23 PM
I've got a 4 camera shoot that requires help for an all-day July 4th big event (concert/speeches/parties). Part will be live-switched, so I need 3 good shooters, and one steadycam operator (full vest system only, no handheld rigs please). Must have tapeless capability and low-light capable cameras.

There will be a rehearsal day on the 3rd (most likely another full day).
If you're interested/available, please send relevant info my way: info@awesomeshot.com
Include brief resume or corporate experience, gear, and rate for shooting/non-shooting time (meetings, setup, etc.).

Thanks!

Bjørn Sørensen
April 1st, 2011, 06:30 AM
Tak for info. case closed.

Garrett Low
April 2nd, 2011, 12:42 AM
Thanks Oren. I'll definitely look into it. I've got a couple of projects that are taking up all my time right now but I'll be in touch soon.

Garrett

Christopher Glavan
April 3rd, 2011, 01:46 AM
Suggestions for a guy like me up here in Redding?

David Chilson
April 3rd, 2011, 02:04 PM
I need 2 additional shooters for a 4 camera shoot in the town of Wilson NY on May 14. (Between Rochester and Niagara Falls, closer to the falls.This is an early morning (5:00 am) start and long day and you must NOT get sea sick. Previous on the water experience helpful, fishing tournament experience a big plus. Must have own equipment. (XHA1 preferred, tape based client requested camera and we will be turning over our tapes.) Please contact me with your daily rate and any further details and please consider the length of the day. (10 hours)

Oren Arieli
April 3rd, 2011, 11:29 PM
Not sure if there is enough of a videographer's community in Redding to warrant a PVA. I would assume that you've got at least a dozen folks dabbling in video full or part time. This is how the BAPVA started, and we've grown to 70 active members (and about 3 times that many on our mailing list). Doesn't take any start-up capitol, just a meeting place, some refreshments, and a willingness to help each other out.
Best of luck!

Oren Arieli
April 3rd, 2011, 11:31 PM
A wedding-coordinating friend of mine has tasked me with finding an experienced 3D filmmaker for a client (with means, thank goodness). If you know of anyone, please send them my way: info{at}awesomeshot.com

Thanks.

Kevin McRoberts
April 4th, 2011, 01:57 PM
Looking for that 4th angle for a full day indoor multi camera shoot. Panasonic P2 or AVCHD ideal, others considered.

Please email mcbob@mcbob.tv with rate and reel. Thanks

David Koeppel
April 4th, 2011, 02:23 PM
I am looking for shooters with the right skills and equipment to provide coverage for a horse show to take place at the Los Angeles Equestrian Centre in Burbank, CA, May 4-8. The paying assignment will mainly involve the filming of individual riders entered in various classes, but may include rotations on a multi-channel Webcast, as well.

Experience filming horses in exhibition is greatly preferred, but for the uninitiated who are willing to spend a few (non-paying) hours with me on a day prior to the event to obtain practice, learn the work flow, and familiarize themselves with the setting, I would take that into consideration.

Please do not apply unless you have a pro- or semi-pro camera that can shoot 16x9, 60i, and has a minimum 10X zoom autofocus lens that can be operated with a multi-speed zoom controller. A sturdy tripod and a high-quality fluid head are also essential. If you’ve filmed horses in action before, please include a link with your inquiry.

Chris Hurd
April 4th, 2011, 02:33 PM
Please state whether or not this is a paying job. Thanks,

Matthew Renoir
April 4th, 2011, 02:50 PM
Hey David, I live near the Equestrian Center, have all my own equipment, and am available the dates listed. I sent you an email with more details. Thanks!

David Koeppel
April 4th, 2011, 03:32 PM
Sorry, I had presumed paying jobs were implied here, unless stated otherwise. Yes, it pays, though exact terms TBD.

Thanks, Matt, I'll be sure to review your credentials.

Chris Hurd
April 4th, 2011, 03:48 PM
Yes, paying jobs are indeed implied in this forum, but for
the sake of clarification we prefer that it's stated implicitly.
Many thanks,

David Koeppel
April 4th, 2011, 05:19 PM
Original post modified to comply. Thanks.

- DK

Andrew Dean
April 5th, 2011, 11:33 AM
We've heard from other directors and DPs... i thought I'd toss my input in as crew.

I'm the guy you dream of attracting. I own a truck full of gear covering every department. I am a 20 year veteran in the industry but the "hobby" and "passion" side of me really enjoys a good scrappy no-budget indy project now and then. As a rule I'm paid nicely for my time and equipment, but I am open to doing the exact same job for free if something intrigues me. When I sign up for freebies, it is without without any delusions I'll ever get paid. I don't have any ego about it. "Lets do this thing" and do it right.

Saying that, go reread Sareesh's post. That right there is the motherload of good advice. His alternate plan is basically a step by step process to attracting ME to your film.

Embellishing that, I'd like to suggest you think of your movie NOT as the collection of the work of the team, but as the thing you have created, honed and perfected in your head. I'm not showing up to help you make a movie. I'm there to FILM your movie. The difference is profound and has everything to do with vision and discipline on your part. If the movie is proceeding in front of me, I can put my energy into doing my job.

If you know exactly what you want - not basically, not mostly - but shot by shot exactly what you want the finished film to look like, so much so that if you could draw, you could create the graphic novel of what is in your head... then we can talk. If not, then I'm not helping you film your movie, I'm helping you figure out what your movie is. That process is SO slow, and SO inefficient and such a pointless waste of a film set that it takes all the wind out of my sails. The absolute best way to run off your crew is to have them waiting around while you "figure things out". The absolute best way to keep a crew is to have everything so organized that they spend their day doing what they agreed to be doing. Soundies are recording sound. Grips are gripping. Actors are acting. If a day goes efficiently, it goes quickly and without as much attitude. Everybody wins.

Thats a huge ask. Having all your crap together is a tremendous demand. But that is precisely the job you are signing up for. The reason the producer and director get their name up front is because their job is the biggest. If you just want to have some fun "playing filmmaker" then just be up front about that. Throw some zombies in the plot and you'll get people to show up for giggles. Thats a whole different thing than attracting a good indy crew.

So for me personally, this is my extension of Sareesh's advice (which you should have reread by now) ...

1. Don't call me until your script is locked down, solid and awesome. Some evolution can occur on set, but if you start improvising scenes and dialog and motivations, you are GUARANTEED to miss something. I'm not going to agree to do your film until I know what your movie is. So... get it on paper at the least.

2. Write a movie that doesn't suck. That seems obvious, but 99/100 scripts that are handed to me are incoherent dribble that shifts genres mid stream and at best is a lame knockoff of some other movie. If a movie is something I'd want to watch, its something I'd want to film. Sometimes I'll help somebody because they are a really nice person, but even then, there has to be *some* hope the finished project is something I could at least show friends without a big "watch this ironically!" disclaimer.

Sareesh nailed it. If you think your script is awesome, go workshop it. Show it around. Test it. If i'm to invest my time and energy sailing with you, make sure your treasure map is accurate. if you have simply grown weary of refining it, then you don't have the energy to see the movie through... so why should I?

3. Put more time and money into attracting actors than attracting me. You can fluke a good movie with green crew. If the actors suck, the movie sucks. Period. Script first. Actors second. With those two nailed, the rest can be sorted out.

4. By the time you talk to me, you should have your leads fully vested and they should have done at least a dozen full length rehearsals (not readthroughs, but actual rehearsals) and the clumsy parts of the script should have been addressed and fixed and re-rehearsed.

Now, #4 might sound extreme and you can get all huffy about how i'm not a team player, but put it in the perspective of efficiency. If you and the 2-3 leads spend a solid week working out the kinks of their lines and performance, that is what, 4 people spending a week? If you go through that same process on set, that is what, 15 people plus a whole lot of gear spending a week doing the exact same thing? And on set, its not just a week. Its 2 weeks because every time we need to do another take because the actor didn't understand the script - that slows the day, loses inspiration and forces rescheduling and replanning around all the various schedules. That means more catering, more crap to sift through when editing... Rushing into the shooting stage is disrespectful of all the volunteer crew. Never dis a volunteer crew.

5. Put more energy into art direction and wardrobe than in me. Whether the movie sucks or not, the wardrobe and art direction can still be a portfolio piece for those departments. Get a good person for each of those roles and get them involved early enough and vested enough that they are able to do what they need. Those people will need thrift store budget, so you HAVE to spend money there. They can volunteer their time, but do not make them volunteer their money to buy clothes and props. A great art director can make magic out of a few hundred bucks, but they need that money to make magic.

6. Put in the time to nail down great locations. Not good, not "will do" but great. Its a huge effort, but locations that do not have major sound issues are vital. No flight path if your film is period. No french horn academy next door. No gymnasiums. Spend time on the location with the DP AND soundie and sort out what happens with lighting through the day and what sound issues arise . Schedule and plan accordingly.

7. Do NOT lie to your crew. If you say you have permission to film somewhere, you need to have permission. If you say you've scouted the location, then by dammit, you should have stepped foot on the location before. I've lost track of how many times i've shown up to a location and the people there had no clue who we were and why we were there. I'm ready to film a movie and instead we are calling people to talk to other people to verify what somebody meant. No. no. no. no. no. no. I'm willing to give up my time and energy, but not willing to get screwed. If it turns out you lied to me about something important? I'm gone. Being a team works both ways, and honestly, it needs to flow MORE from the "indy director" down than it needs to flow up. You need to respect the time and effort of the crew more than we need to respect your vision. You own the final product, so its only fair. You are asking the favor, not me. Do not lie.

8. Food. No indy film is ever "no budget". You gotta pay for food, and it needs to change in some fashion between meals. Not the same box of crackers and easy cheese. I'm more than happy for somebody's mom to make sammiches. I'm not asking for gourmet, just make sure we have some meals, have some meal breaks and there is drinking water and glasses aplenty. Write my name on a plastic cup and buy generic soda, thats fine. But make sure there is something.

For multiple days in a row, junk food kills momentum. At least have some of the meals "healthy". The fatty salty stuff is awesome, but makes you want a nap if the shoot goes long.

9. Money. See, i'm not of the same camp as everyone else here. There are decent crew out there that will work for free... but you gotta spend money on 1-8. Part of why I want people to pay me is because if they are paying me by the hour or day, then they naturally start to prioritize 1-6, if not 1-8. If you are paying me $2k/day for me and my gear, then YOU will come up with the bright idea to maybe rehearse your actors before they are on set with me and maybe double check locations and the upcoming weather. You might even decide NOT to shoot the outdoor scene in the rain because its pretty obvious it doesn't match with the rest of the footage and "we might as well shoot something since we are all ready to go" means paying for a whole pointless day of shooting.

So probably the #1 most important lesson here is that even if you are not paying your crew, you need to structure your shoots as if you were.

Let me repeat that because it is so important: No matter what you are paying your crew, you need to structure your shoots with the same awareness and caution that you would if you were paying the $10,000/day that a proper indy film shoot might cost. Anything that might waste part of a day of full crew? Don't do that, unless its worth $2500 out of your own pocket.

Here is a related life-lesson: If you ever ask people to help you move, you need to box up all your crap BEFORE they show up. Moving all your stuff is enough of a favor. If they show up and all your stuff is out on the shelves and you don't have any boxes and haven't sorted out a moving van or even a trailer, then you have abused your friends and are a jerk. You also need to have a new apartment already rented and have a map to it. There are professional moving companies that you can pay to box it all up and bring trucks and store your stuff and unpack it. If you are asking your friends to do all that you need to spell out exactly what you are asking because "help me move my stuff" is usually a big enough favor on its own. And if you want your volunteers to stay happy? You need to measure your hideabed couch and make sure it fits in the third floor doorway before people carry it all the way up the stairs. (i wish that was an abstract lesson and not something i experienced firsthand. ugh)

The above paragraph was also an analogy, if that wasn't obvious. hehe


Now I realize nobody is reading on this far, but this brings me to a related but possibly tangential point:

Crew need gear to do their job. If lighting and grip are a part of your set, you need to source decent lighting and grip gear. If somebody is volunteering their time to gaff, it is your job to get lights into their hand to gaff with.

There is a dangerous logic trap that comes next with indy directors. here it is:

1. i don't have enough money to do this film, but am going for it
2. i found somebody to gaff for free, but they need lights
3. I can rent lights that are the right tools for the job, but they are so expensive!
4. I know... for the same money i can BUY cheap lights, force the gaffer to make them work and then own them for my next shoot!

you can repeat that with grip or sound gear too. It is really hard to get no budget directors to comprehend how short sighted the jump from 3 to 4 is. You get somebody to work for free, then CHOOSE to force them to work extra hard and compromise what they can accomplish so you can have a long term investment in gear. That sucks.

Here is the solution to that logic trap:
5. At the end of the shoot, the low budget lighting/grip/sound gear becomes the property of the gaff/grip/soundie as payment/reward for their services.

Knowing you don't keep the gear may very well change your priority. At the least, the volunteers have something for their time. Either they get some ghetto gear out of it, (which you will then be able to use next time you bring them on as crew like you promised!) or you will opt to rent the good stuff, in which case the crew gets to use good gear. win/win.



It seems so obvious, but if you pay people to be on set, they are less upset when you are inefficient and slow and "learning the trade" on their time. If you cannot pay people, then you need to hustle something fierce to make sure you are NOT "learning the trade" on their time.

So with all that sorted out, you can come to me and pitch your movie, your script, your actors and your locations. THAT pitch, with all that stuff sorted out, has an infinitely better chance of attracting a good indy crew. If you can answer all the above concerns straight off the bat, then that is the absolute best way, in my opinion, to attract an independent film crew.

Any of us would gladly time travel back to be an unpaid crew on the original starwars or indiana jones movies. Anothert way to attract a crew? Be an upcoming film visionary with a groundbreaking movie... or win the lotto and pay people good money to put up with your halfassed piece of crap. Either way works for me.


And that snappy reaction to James? Way inappropriate. If you want to be a director of a good crew, you need a WAY thicker skin and more useful reaction to adversity. You flare up like that on set and you'll lose crew and even friends. If you are director of a fully paid piece, you can cop all the attitude you want. If you are the director of an unpaid piece? You get to be the bigger man in ALL disputes, or run the risk of being "right"... and alone.

my 2c anyways. Hope i didn't seem entitled. Actually, i'm not sure I care if i seem entitled. Heh!

Andy Graham
April 5th, 2011, 11:45 AM
Now theres a post, might i suggest shooting in New Zealand Sean :)

Andy

Kevin Lewis
April 5th, 2011, 04:07 PM
I cant believe I read Andrews whole post. I must say that he does bring up some very good points.

Gary Nattrass
April 6th, 2011, 02:15 AM
Andrew's post is absolutely spot on and should be given as an initial reply to all lo/no productions.

I have over 30 years in the mainstream TV and film industry but now enjoy working on indie films and putting a bit back giving the next generation assistance.

I have been lucky that all the guys I have worked with so far have always put their film first and have been very organised and pro, more so than some mainstream broadcasters I have worked for.

But I still get people who don't even bother to reply to me or want me to shoot their lo/no film as if it was a hollywood blockbuster, I tend to leave them to their dreams and most of the time the film never gets made.

Garrett Low
April 6th, 2011, 10:24 AM
8. Food. No indy film is ever "no budget". You gotta pay for food, and it needs to change in some fashion between meals. Not the same box of crackers and easy cheese. I'm more than happy for somebody's mom to make sammiches. I'm not asking for gourmet, just make sure we have some meals, have some meal breaks and there is drinking water and glasses aplenty. Write my name on a plastic cup and buy generic soda, thats fine. But make sure there is something.

Andrew's post should be a must read for anyone thinking about making a movie beyond gathering friends on a weekend and just shooting a "movie".

I do shoot a lot of indie shorts through the film coop I belong to, both as crew member and sometimes as producer. A couple of things I've learned is that the successful projects are the ones that are well organized and do follow the "Hollywood" organization model, although to a much smaller degree. There are reasons why you create a shot list, send out call sheet, and actually scout locations. Block out your scenes before you get the whole crew on set. The time to discover that your big epic crane shot won't work because you don't have the clearance needed for your rig isn't when the actors and crew are standing around on the day of the shoot.

As Andrew mentioned in his point #8, no film is ever made with no budget. The lease I've spent on making a short (about 6minutes running time) is just under $1000. We got the location for free, actors and crew volunteered there time and talents, and we had all of our gear (mostly mine) provided by the crew members so we didn't have to rent any. We did have to purchase some expendables and pay for some props to dress the set, and of course provided food and beverages throughout the production. We had two full crew pre-production meetings where food and drinks were provided, and three rehearsals with the cast (again some food and beverages). Things like makeup, copying services (every crew member and cast member should have a script provided to them), and other incidentals add up very quickly. However, if you show that you are willing to put yourself out to make sure your crew is looked after, they will work like crazy for you.

Food is recurring theme for a lot of shoots I've been on. One of the things that I was told when I started that still sticks with me is, "a hungry crew is a grumpy and unproductive crew". That's really true, Always have bottled water and juice available. And a great way to show that you care about your crew is to send out a questionnaire asking if the anyone has any food allergies or are vegetarian or vegan.

This is a great thread and hopefully will enable a lot of indie filmmakers to see there movies get made.

-Garrett

Colin McDonald
April 6th, 2011, 01:31 PM
We've heard from other directors and DPs... i thought I'd toss my input in as crew...
Since no one else has actually said it yet, may I respectfully suggest that this post be made a sticky?

Alex Khachatryan
April 6th, 2011, 07:21 PM
I am looking for 2nd shooter for ceremony with HDV camera (to match my Sony Z5) in Weehawken, NJ Apr.17 from 4:30 to 7:00 pm

I need some b-roll of the venue and you will have to be on tripod all the time during the ceremony and give me the tapes after you are done.

Paid 125 cash on the spot.

Garrett Low
April 7th, 2011, 02:56 PM
I'm looking for someone for a weekday shoot of a sit down interview to be captured sometime during the week of May 9th in Phoenix. The finished video will be approximately 2.5 to 3 minutes and would have one person on camera delivering lines.

I will need you to shoot the interview and possibly shoot some b-roll of the surroundings and send me the raw footage which I will then edit. The interview itself should take approximately 1 hour. The entire shoot should be no more than half day including setup and strike. The video needs to be shot in HD and you would have to provide all equipment including lights (simple three point lighting), camera, and audio equipment. The interview will be shot on a weekday during the week of May 9th. Date and time will be coordinated with the interview subject.

If you are interested please send me an estimate based on a half day shoot, your equipment list, and any links to examples of your work.

Thanks
Garrett

Sean Cloutier
April 8th, 2011, 05:35 PM
Damn... I should have been born in New Zealand. I place blame squarely on my parents shoulders.

Again, awesome feedback. Thank you for the replies!

And yes, I agree about the sticky. Not only has this thread helped me greatly, but I suspect the information can/will help many to come. And who knows... maybe some day someone walk up to me and go...

"Oh my GOD!!! You're SEAN CLOUTIER!!! Your movies suck, but that thread you started was AWESOME!"

or maybe he says he liked my movies... but then the joke isn't as funny

:-)

James Fazzaro
April 8th, 2011, 11:02 PM
I have a Canon XH A1 and an XL H1 HDV setup. Would that be fine, or would you prefer a Sony HDV camera? I'm available!

James Fazzaro
April 8th, 2011, 11:11 PM
I sent you an email.
Thanks,
James F

Andrew Dean
April 9th, 2011, 10:29 AM
Doh, Sorry Sean. In a frothy fury fueled by suggestions of stickydom, I expanded my diatribe to include on set and post production tips and posted it in the indy production forum.

http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/techniques-independent-production/494337-crewmembers-tips-attracting-indy-crewmembers.html

Your thread will always be the original, and mine the cheesy spinoff.


As to being born in the wrong country, thats kinda funny. I'm actually a texas expat. Born in dallas, grew up in oak cliff and lived in east dallas until my wife and I packed up and moved in search of Xena and hobbits 8 years ago. I used to date a girl in lewisville... Its such a crazy small world. heh.

Good luck with the movie! I'll look for your name on the sundance website.

P.S. lewisville is a dump! ha!

Sean Cloutier
April 10th, 2011, 01:55 AM
Andrew, your input is extremely valuable and well stated. It should be a thread of its own. I'm always amazed that people with vast knowledge are willing to help the underlings. Me being an underling, so thank you.

I hope you're right about the film festivals. I've got a great story/script. Yea, every story has been told a million times before, but the way I tell it is interesting. The same can be said for the notes on a music scale. Each notes been played a gagillion times, but the arrangement is what makes it unique.

I guess in the end, I'm looking for the same thing everyone else is looking for...

... I want my life to be amazing. One day I'll be old and look back on my life. I want to feel like I haven't taken this gift for granted. I want to take comfort that I didn't waste it.