You’re NOT a FILMMAKER If…

YO Darious Britt here.

You guys know me by now. I’m all about getting you to go out and make films: no matter the circumstance.

I’ve had a few discussions recently with some peeps. and this topic cropped up:

How to know if you’re a “real” filmmaker.

My initial thought was that old adage you hear in film school right: “If you wanna be a filmmaker, go out and pick up a camera, record something. congratulations you’re a filmmaker”

I agree with this. All the way.

The second you decide to do the thing, you can call yourself the thing. It’s very inspiring. But there’s more to it than that. You have to keep doing the thing.

If you made a short film 10 years ago, quite filmmaking all together and you’ve been pulling teeth for the last 7 year. You’re not a filmmaker anymore, you’re a dentist right?

Let’s kick it off with a quote:

“You are what you do everyday” – Jon Chu

I think this definition of an occupation is more accurate. You are what you do everyday. Or most days anyways.

So you are a filmmaker if you make films most days of the year.

Notice I didn’t say anything about money.

If you aren’t paid to make films, you’re still a filmmaker. You’re just not at the professional level yet. You still with me?

So here’s the good news. If you wanna be a filmmaker, you just have to do the thing. It doesn’t matter if you’re budget is 25 cents. Doesn’t matter if you arent getting paid for it. If you spend your time making films most days, or working on making them in some capacity. You’re a filmmaker. Period.

Now let’s talk about the things that stop you from being a filmmaker.

WAITING FOR MONEY

Waiting for money is not an excuse to not make films. Let me explain.
I have a friend. Went to film school together. He had this passion project. a feature film. said he couldn’t do it for less than $500,000 wanted to do it the “right way”- none of this low budget stuff cuz that’s not how real films are made.

He had to have the casting director, 1-ton grip truck, big crew, the whole bit yada yada yada yada. This thing was supposed to break him into the industry.

He tried raising money for this film for FOUR years. He almost got financing twice. Both times it fell through.

It’s been seven years now. Last I checked, He’s not even into filmmaking anymore. He gave up moved onto something else.

That really sucks for him. I don’t wish that on anyone but there’s a teachable moment here:

  1. While he was trying to raise money, he wasn’t making any new films. No shorts. No microfilms. No nothing.
  2. Because he refused to do lower budget films, he wasn’t getting any better. how else are you supposed to practice your craft?
  3. Chasing money, stopped him from being a filmmaker. If all you do is spend your time chasing money every day or most days, then are you a filmmaker or a fundraiser???

Money is just 1 of many tools used to make a film, it’s a powerful tool but at the end of the day, it’s just a tool, just like a camera, or a shotgun mic, or a call sheet, or a shot list.

You don’t have to have money to make films.

The goal shouldn’t be to find money, to make a good film, the goal should be to develop your skills and your craft so well that you don’t need a lot of money to make a good film.

If you can do that, you will attract money, you won’t have to chase it so hard. There are some dope films that have been made for practically pennies on the dollar.

Just to name a few.

All those peeps made their first films for next to nothing. Relatively speaking. That’s how they started their careers. They didn’t allow lack of money to stop them.

I’m not saying you can’t have a $500,000 passion project, but you gotta temper your passion with practicality.

If you can’t make a captivating short film or a feature on a budget, having 500,000 dollars or 20 million dollars isn’t going to fix the problem.
Money isn’t pixie dust. You can’t just sprinkle money on a project to make it compelling.

If you can’t raise the money for your 500k passion project, tuck that sucker away in your back pocket for now and make another project that you can do for $500 or $1,000 dollars, whatever you can afford, and knock it out of the park.

Don’t let fundraising stop you from being a filmmaker.

WAITING FOR THE RIGHT GEAR

If you’ve got a closet full of gear and you haven’t made a film in the last two years, because you’re waiting on more gear, you’re allowing gear to stop you from being a filmmaker.

Bruh-bruh gear acquisition syndrome is a legit thing. I’m not even joking.

I’ve consulted with people that have 10x more gear than me, and they haven’t done anything with it. It’s just collecting dust. They don’t know how to use half of it.

It’s taken me years to get the gear that I have. But I’ve made films along the way.

I’ve made shorts films in the past with just a camera, a tripod, and a hot shoe mic. Didn’t even use lights.

For all, you peeps affected by gear acquisition syndrome my heart goes out to you, but here’s the deal bruh-bruh you’re not allowed to buy another piece of gear until you go out and make something.

If I find out you bought yourself another gimbal for Valentine’s Day and you still haven’t shot anything. I’m gonna have to reach through the screen and slap you, and I mean that in the most loving way humanly possible.

Don’t let gear acquisition syndrome stop you from being a filmmaker.

WAITING FOR A CREW

Having a crew is nice. There are some projects that you absolutely must have crew for. But you can still make films without a crew.

  1.  If you’re just starting out. There are plenty of workarounds. but you have to simplify your projects. minimal locations, minimal actors, no scenes requiring extras, shoot outdoors at magic hour, easy lighting.
  2. If you have an idea that you absolutely must have crew for, put it in your back pocket for now, and write another project. Something smaller in scope that you can knock out solo. Keep it simple.
    Write a story with no dialogue if you have to. just use a ton of voice over. pull a Terrence Malick
  3.  I’ve made films with a crew of 12, I’ve made films completely solo. Plenty of videos on this channel, showing you how to do both.

I also did a video on how to find a crew. Don’t let lack of crew stop you from being a filmmaker. Next excuse:

NO ACTORS

I did a whole video on what to do if you can’t find actors. Check that video out here.

If you don’t have access to professionals, then use hobbyists or people who are interested in acting but maybe haven’t had the chance to flex that muscle. If you don’t have any of those, use friends, if you don’t have friends use family.

If you can’t use friends and family then do a Letters to July type thing where you film yourself and things around you, build a story out of that. or a video diary.

Film yourself self. We’ve done that on this channel.

Actors are great, but if you don’t have them, don’t let this stop you from being a filmmaker.

THE BIGGER PICTURE

Here’s the deal, Bruh-bruh:

If you wanna make amazing work, you have to develop your craft. There is so much to learn it’ll make your head spin.

I’ve been doing this for years and I still learn new things every day.

There is no such thing as standing still. You’re either moving forward or you’re moving backwards. If you’re always creating, you’re always learning and improving, you move forward. If you’re not making films, you get rusty, you forget things, you move backwards.

We can’t afford to waste time waiting around for money, or actors, or crew. Those things will come if you keep working at it, but you don’t need those things to develop your craftsmanship. Don’t let those things stop you from being a filmmaker.

Until next time –DBritt out!

What To Do When Film Projects Fall Apart

So what do we do when projects fall through?

When you spend all that time and energy on something, and it kind of goes up in smoke right in front of you. What do we do?

Do we just roll over and play dead?

I was working on a short film called Stay Pretty. You guys know about it. I posted on Instagram and talked about it on the channel.

I started this project in September of last year. Yes, this was just another short film, but I was pushing myself into new areas and pushing myself out of my comfort zone with this one. This is the first short film where I was working with an editor and a legit composer.

Anyways fast forward and the Coronavirus pumped the brakes on all of that.

And now the whole thing is kind of a mess. Everybody took a hit. I mean look at the studios, they took a major blow.

I’m sure some of you are in the same position with your projects.

It sucks.

It’s not just that you don’t get to do this cool thing that you wanted to share with the world, but it’s the:

  • The time
  • The energy
  • The effort
  • The money
  • The opportunity cost.

You could have done other things with all that time you spent working on this project that ultimately might not be happening.

That said here we are now what? What do you do from here, where do we go?

Pocket Projects

The first thing is pocket projects. I’m a firm believer in always having a project in your back pocket, maybe even a few.

Back pocket projects are those ideas that don’t require as many resources to pull off as your ambitious projects.

If your main project has a budget of $1,000, then your back pocket idea might cost $200, and use fewer actors… you get the idea. This way, if your main project tanks, you just move on to one of those ideas in your back pocket and keep the momentum going.

You see the same thing in the professional film space. Why do you think producers have so many projects and development? There are so many times when you think a project is a go, and it’s going to take off, and then it just fizzles. The only way to insulate yourself from that risk is to spread out the risk to have more things going more irons in the fire.

If five of those projects never go anywhere, but one makes it through, then boom that’s progress.

Focus On Progress

There are no guarantees in this game we play, boys and girls: Success, failure, fame, projects getting projects greenlit, securing financing.  We don’t always have as much control over these things as we would like.

But here’s the good news. You will always learn more from your failures than you will your successes.

Knowledge stacks. It’s like interest in a bank account. The more you learn, the more you’re able to learn. Eventually, you reach a tipping point where success is inevitable. You know too much not to be successful.

Rather than dwell on what didn’t work and what didn’t happen,

Shift your focus on what you learned from the experience, what you can take with you into the next project.

You did not come out of this experience empty-handed, You actually learned something. You probably learned a lot of things.

Take a moment and list out what you learned. If you do this I think you’ll find you’ll feel more empowered by the experience rather than defeated.

Success is nothing but a series of small wins.

Some of those wins come from failure. Most people fail their way into success.

As they say, the master has failed more times than the beginner even tried. I take heart in that.

Walk While You Think

Last but not least, keep your head up. Sometimes it’s hard to do, but here’s a trick. It’s called walking while you think.

You have more perseverance than you realize.

Perseverance is the hard work you do after you’re exhausted from the hard work you’ve already done.

Nobody feels like they have what it takes 100 % of the time. You show me someone that confident, and I’ll show you a narcissist or a liar. Doubt is apart of the game. It’s a natural part of this journey we call filmmaking. It’s hard. It’s challenging.

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve thought of quitting both YouTube and filmmaking. Those thoughts will always cross your mind at some point, but then you just keep going. You press on, and you push past it. You figure it out.

Honestly, Fam. Sometimes you just don’t fucking know. You second guess yourself. You overthink things, and the only way to combat that is to follow your feet. Walk while you think. Take all the time you need to doubt yourself. Just make sure you’re walking while you do it.

For example, say your last project fell through. You don’t think you have what it takes? That’s fine. While you’re doubting yourself, just work on the next film. Walk while you think. Just keep moving.

You’re not alone in this. This will not be the most disappointing thing to happen to you, I promise.

There are lots of peaks and valleys on your journey. There will be lots of disappointments. It’s all a part of failing your way to success.

As for me, I don’t know what will happen with Stay Pretty. Hopefully, I can finish it. We’ll see. I’ve got a few back-pocket ideas under my belt, if not.

Meanwhile, I’ve already started writing my list of what I’ve learned.

Get in the comments and tell me how this pandemic has affected your projects I’ll be reading them. I can’t answer all of them, but I do read all of them.

Make every day count, rack up the 10K, and keep hustling.

-D Britt out