
Originally Posted by
jpp
There's one notorious case of a director who boasted in public that his actors paid for their parts, but he was already well established in the indie world, so that course probably isn't recommended.
Assuming you're in the U.S.:
Limited Partnerships and Limited Liability Partnerships. You sell shares to investors, who have no control over the project and no liability beyond their investment, and who typically know nothing about the movie business (otherwise, they'd never invest). Could be friends, family, associates of family, rich people you may happen to know, your dentist, your aunt's dentist, or bona fide investors.
Successful real estate investors during boom times tend to be the best bet, because they're the stupidest. Innovators and industrialists are usually too smart for film investments, unless they've got so much money it doesn't matter, or they're interested in the medium or expect to sleep with the starlet. Trust fund brats are also good prospects. The investment per person could be as little as a few hundred dollars, to tens or hundreds of thousands.
Celebrity attachments. You convince one or more stars to appear in the movie and on that basis raise money or hire an established producer who knows how to go about raising money. A genuinely famous actor, someone the average moviegoer will know, usually will bring up to $1-2 million on an indie project. Somebody lesser known will help, but the help may not be decisive. I know of two instances where the writers gave the script to the actor in a coffee shop and the film got made based strictly on those associations. So if you're in NY or LA, drink lots of espresso and carry the script at all times.
Get a short into the Sundance Film Festival, suck up to the staff and get yourself invited by Sundance to develop your feature script in their writing and directing workshops. At that point, the project may attract some producer interest, based on the association with Sundance. A number of films have gotten made this way, at 6 and 7 figure budgets, though Sundance is less help than it used to be. Of course, you need Sundance-type material if you expect to play ball.
And the old standbys:
- Rich parents.
- Get a real job and finance the project yourself.
- Credit cards.
- forget raising $200K and make movies with what resources you have to find out 1) if you really want to make movies, and 2) if you have the slightest trace of talent, creativity or cinematic intelligence. The odds are against you (and everyone) in all categories, whether you went to film school or have a Ph.D. in quantum mechanics, and it doesn't take $200K to find out.