
I dunno if those landed him gigs, but that paved his path into filmmaking.
Moderator: Niotex
A lot of filmmakers like Christopher Nolan, P.T Andersen, Quentin Tarantino, and Steven Soderbergh first started off at a young age putting together random footage on the VHS player and using different audio sources. Obviously this stuff didn't get them their jobs, but it did benefit them later on in their lives.Castor Troy wrote:Just to add some more positive stuff, Edgar Wright who directed Scott Pilgrim, Shaun of the Dead, and Hot Fuzz got his start editing movie clips to Beatles songs.
I dunno if those landed him gigs, but that paved his path into filmmaking.
No kidding.Bauzi wrote:I feel a bit like someone treats beginners like shit and I feel exploited. I study Digital Film & Animation and there is an "job" offer on our black board:
Cutter for musicvideos, cutter for a trailer, internet tv and distribution, administrative work, keeping the website up to date,... for 4 months. Than there might be some project with cash involved.
Are you shitting me? Being a personal bitch for 4 months... for free? >_<
Bauzi wrote:I feel a bit like someone treats beginners like shit and I feel exploited. I study Digital Film & Animation and there is an "job" offer on our black board:
Cutter for musicvideos, cutter for a trailer, internet tv and distribution, administrative work, keeping the website up to date,... for 4 months. Than there might be some project with cash involved.
Are you shitting me? Being a personal bitch for 4 months... for free? >_<
Bauzi wrote:Surprise! It suggests that you should never work for free for a legitimate business.
Wow! I bet you learned a lot from the experience though. I heard that 1 week of PA work in Hollywood is more productive than 4 years of study.Castor Troy wrote:People will do anything to live the dream....
In between editing gigs from 2009-2010, I tried to do the "work as a PA (production assistant) for free and have the director and producers yell at you as you deliver their bagels and coffee" route. But the doorway to get into that is so tiny, it's like having real people trying to actually fit inside a mouse hole.
Back when I was a kid, my friend's brother worked as a PA on Power Rangers and said it was a difficult, but awesome experience. He was paid peanuts, but at least he can say he worked on Power Rangers.McDirty wrote:Bauzi wrote:Surprise! It suggests that you should never work for free for a legitimate business.Because they have money for sure, that's why. Thanks for the chart Bauzi. I gotta kick out of it.
Wow! I bet you learned a lot from the experience though. I heard that 1 week of PA work in Hollywood is more productive than 4 years of study.Castor Troy wrote:People will do anything to live the dream....
In between editing gigs from 2009-2010, I tried to do the "work as a PA (production assistant) for free and have the director and producers yell at you as you deliver their bagels and coffee" route. But the doorway to get into that is so tiny, it's like having real people trying to actually fit inside a mouse hole.