Hi ,Â
The absolute best way to learn how to finance your film is to learn from other filmmakers and how they succeeded. There is no one road to financing. There is no magic database of investors. It's really tough work and you'll take as many steps forward as you will backward when
it comes to film financing.Â
To quote Spike Lee in the video below (starting at 09:34), "You have to be inventive, you have to look under every nook and cranny. There is nothing I can tell anyone that there's a golden trail with a pot of gold at the end."
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This entire video is filled with at least 30 ways different filmmakers financed their films. That is how you learn how to finance yours.Â
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We write up as many interviews
as we can, so we can all learn from them. Some of our top articles include:Â
- How the Best Independent Films Were Funded
- Film Financing Stories and
Lessons from Famous Producers and Directors
We offer the best
tools, documents and templates in the industry, to help you craft your OFFER, but a filmmaker still has to pave their own "golden road" to find the pot of gold. We believe our job is to help you find the most direct path AND, more importantly, to
make sure you have an extremely compelling case that makes people want to invest with you when you do find them.
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Too many filmmakers think it's hard to find investors. It isn't. They find FilmProposals almost every day - because we attract them AND because we have rock solid investments (as much as a film can be) for them to review. When we talk to investors, we can ramble off how the financing came to be for at least five other similar
films.
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This is totally made up, but something like, "Yes, Movie X started with 30% tax incentives from being filmed in Louisiana, 10% was raised in back end talent agreements and in kind donations, then the first in investors put up the next 30% for production and some of post, they got gap financing for another 10%, used crowdfunding for 20% and then found additional private investors for the last 10%. The initial investors recouped 150% of their investment and the
second wave made their money back."Â
If you don't know the financing story of at least 5 films, you haven't done your homework. If a filmmaker is having trouble finding financing, it's because they don't have an investment. And it's 100% certain that if you don't have an investment, you won't have investors. You've got to give people something in which to invest. A script is not an investment vehicle.
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Your road will look different than 10 other
filmmaker's. But learning from everyone else's roads is how you find financing. It is not by emailing a stranger this:Â
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"I have ready script, casting done,costings, location  marked, Now i need a investors who can work along with us"
Yes, that's one of thousands of emails we get, many of which are responses to these very newsletters. You can send 2 million of those emails to strangers and you won't be a single step closer to making your film.
If anything, you're moving further away from financing, because you are advertising to the industry you are inexperienced, uneducated and frankly, too lazy to learn about financing - no one is giving money to a person who won't bother to learn about money.Â
If Martin Scorsese, Matthew McConaughey and Spike Lee are telling you how hard it was for them to find financing for their movies, then that should tell you financing a film is serious business and requires a filmmaker willing to
take it seriously. Â
Learn from people who HAVE made their movies and then use what you learn and make it your own.Â