Make A Hit With Your No Budget Film!

Estimated read time 6 min read
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About How to Make a No-Budget Short Film

Use as little money to make your film as humanly possible. This mandate challenges artists to work with only the resources and tools available and make the most of themโ€ฆ without starving their crews.

Tip 1: Make โ€œLow-Budgetโ€ โ€œSlow-Budgetโ€

โ€œMy favorite thing to do on a low-budget project is to take it slow. As budgets get bigger, time is the one element you begin to get less and less of. However, time is the one luxury that lower budgets can actually afford. Everyone involved has to champion the notion that not rushing through your financially strapped production is paramount to preserving the integrity of the film.โ€ โ€“ Tomรกs Whitmore, panelist (Dillon Francisโ€™ โ€œWithout Youโ€ music video, The Chaingang of 1974โ€™s โ€œSleepwalkingโ€ music video)

โ€œExpression takes time. Be patient. Do not rush a project for the sake of completion; rather, have the self control and discipline to develop the piece from stem to stern. Make sure you have an instinct developed with regards to what it is you are trying to create and say.โ€ โ€“ Alexander D. Paul, director of photography (โ€œLay in Waitโ€)

Tip 2: Know Your Place

โ€œWrite for a location you know you can use for free.โ€ โ€“ Sarah Adina Smith (The Midnight Swim),juror

โ€œMaybe youโ€™ve got a cousin who manages a bookstore, or an eye doctor that really likes you. Could that scene take place in a bookstore or doctorโ€™s waiting room? Characters and story are paramount, the details can always change.โ€ โ€“ Michael Peter (5-Second Films), juror

Tip 3: Donโ€™t Wait โ€™til itโ€™s Perfect

โ€œDonโ€™t worry about what makes sense. Allow for accidents. [My film] โ€˜Woman Who Hates Plantsโ€™ is based on a photo of a woman I found in a thrift store. I didnโ€™t look for her, she came to me. Chance and coincidence are your friends.โ€ โ€“ Morgan Miller, filmmaker (โ€œWoman Who Hates Plantsโ€)

โ€œMake [your film] as soon as youโ€™re about 85 percent happy with it. Youโ€™ll learn more and be further along after producing it and putting it out there than you will by waiting for perfection.โ€ โ€“ Igor Hiller, Emily Krakowsky, and Marvin Lemus, panelists (The Kids Table Comedy)

โ€œMake the shortest film your narrative can sustain.โ€ โ€“ Alberto Roldan, director (โ€œEverything & Everything & Everythingโ€)

Tip 4: Play to Your Strengths and Weaknesses

โ€œIf youโ€™re a small crew with small cameras it means youโ€™re nimble and can film undetected. You can move faster and you donโ€™t intimidate actors. Think positive and just donโ€™t stop making.โ€ โ€“ Jordan Long, filmmaker (โ€œNick Olson & Lilah Horwitz โ€“ Makersโ€)

Tip 5: Focus on Emotion

โ€œFocus on emotion. The audience will forgive you if your film is a little rough around the edges, as long as you keep them engaged. If youโ€™re a VFX artist, you can generate production value in post. If youโ€™re an actor, you can make a great character piece. If youโ€™re a DP, you can produce a visually arresting film. But whatever you do: Focus on emotion.โ€ โ€“ Chris Keller, filmmaker (โ€œValseโ€)

Tip 6A: Tag Teamโ€ฆ

โ€œDonโ€™t be afraid to ask for favors. You can never tell who might be excited to help out on a project by funding or loaning equipment, and sometimes your least expected collaborator can be exactly the missing piece you were looking for to complete your team or find the solution to a problem thatโ€™s been bugging you.โ€ โ€“ Elle Schneider, cinematographer and creative director of Digital Bolex

Tip 6B: โ€ฆSelectively

โ€œAs a general rule, I try to involve as few people as possible in my films becauseโ€”even with everyone working for freeโ€”it always seems the more people you involve the more it ends up costing you. (When someoneโ€™s come all the way to your house to make a film, the least you can do is offer them a drink and a sandwich.) So I always try to do as much of everythingโ€”writing, shooting, animating, editingโ€”as I possibly can myself. Iโ€™ve mostly been concentrating on animation, and either doing the voices myself or asking friends who have their own sound equipment to do voices for me. That way when I say my films are zero-budget, I really mean it.โ€ โ€“ Molly Brown, filmmaker (โ€œHaunted Hospitalโ€)

Tip 7: Stiff Upper Lip

โ€œNo matter how much youโ€™re doubting yourself or panicking on the inside, present a calm, enthused, confident exterior. Your team can only put as much heart and soul into it as you do, and when youโ€™re working long hours for free you need all the heart and soul you can get.โ€ โ€“ย Ruth Sewell, filmmaker (โ€œCountryphileโ€). This is one of the tips for How to Make a No Budget Short Film.

Tip 8: Keep Your Promises

โ€œWhen indie filmmakers are able to borrow locations, props, etc. for free or for a low fee, often theyโ€™ll promise a copy of the film on DVD as well. Once your film is finished and you just want to break from everything, you can easily forget about the promises youโ€™ve made! These people have been kind enough to offer something of theirs for filming; the least you can do is make a copy of the film and send it to them.โ€ โ€“ Andy Salamonczyk, producer and director (โ€œRichieโ€)

Tip 9: Sound Should Be Your Technical Priority

โ€œNothing screams โ€˜amateurโ€™ like bad sound. In fact, youโ€™re better off having a great sound while shooting on an iPhone than you are having crappy sound while shooting on a RED Dragon. Always get a sound person who knows what he/she is doing, and make sure you have a decent mic and mixer. โ€ โ€“ย Blake Hodges, three-time No Budget Film Festival participant (โ€œLady and the Bum,โ€ โ€œAlarmed,โ€ โ€œSecurityโ€). This is one of the tips for How to Make a No Budget Short Film.

Tip 10: Study, Study, Study

โ€œWatch as many feature-length and short films as possible. Whether they be art films like those made by Stan Brakhage, or B-movies made in the 1970s, every film has something that will help in creating a unique film of your own. Use these resources to create an uncompromising aesthetic of your own by experimenting with different mediums and cameras.” These are the steps for “How to Make a No Budget Short Film”.


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