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The term "low-budget" can refer to anything from a $10 million indie flick to a student film produced on borrowed equipment with little or no money. Low budget filmmakers can range from seasoned auteurs attempting to shed the shackles of major studio control to novice talents trying to break into the industry. Designed for would-be filmmakers of all experience levels, this book explains how to make a good, commercially successful, low-budget movie in the current multi-million dollar Hollywood climate. The purpose is not only to show how to get movies made and distributed, but also how to maximize a film's potential for significant profit. Written in practical, understandable terms, the book covers everything from commercially viable genres to the most efficient film and video formats, along with tips on hiring stars, pursuing investors, distributing and marketing a film, and keeping track of expenses.
Historical papers are prefixed to several issues.
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The person who relates The Story of Raphe Rapherty is by no means an omniscient narrator who can tell you everything that has occurred, but certainly does know how to get into Raphe's free-associating head, and to let you know a great deal about what he happens to be thinking and feeling and remembering, from childhood through old age. Raphe is an 'introvert', not in the current sense of being shy, but in Carl Jung's original sense: A person whose attention tends naturally to be focused primarily on what's happening within himself, rather than being focused outwardly toward the world. Most of us are sensibly focused in the latter direction. Jungianly speaking, we are 'extroverts'. Raphe grad...