The First Movie Is The Toughest: A Filmmaker’s Story Of How It Was Done
(having read books on making movies Hollywood style). I respect the attitude and passion of guerrilla filmmaking, but I was able to secure enough funding to pay for production insurance to protect cast and crew. Able to secure permits to avoid having filming stopped and feed cast and crew well.
There’s a huge difference between physically shooting a movie, seeing it completed and finding a larger audience than your friends and family. Bottom line is nobody sets out to make a movie and fail. Making a smaller budget movie is not for everyone. It may sound exciting and glamorous at the start, but those feelings quickly fade as the amount of work gets overwhelming before you even begin to shoot. After a couple of well meaning production meetings and cast rehearsals, some people will drop out of the movie when it becomes clear the time and energy involved.