There a a number of ways to make a low-budget film look and feel like a bigger-budget masterpiece. Here are a few:
1. Make sure your script is awesome. The biggest reason low-budget films look and feel amateur would be an amateur script. If the story, dialogue, and characters are solid, your film will resonate more with audiences, and thus they will be more forgiving with the technical limitations that come with money limitations.
2. Hire good actors. Do not hire your friends and family (unless they are good actors). This doesn't need to be a huge expense, either, as many great actors will work for cheap if the script is good enough. That goes back to the script. It has to be a good script!
3. Hire talented crew, specifically in these positions: director of Photography, sound, and editing. If you have talented people running these departments, then it will compensate dramatically for the less talented peeps working under them.
4. Eliminate any big-budget FX needs, and instead spend those dollars on good actors and good crew. If you're trying to make a sci-fi action flick, it's going to be expensive. Stick to subject matter that is cheap to film (i.e. contemporary stories with small ensemble casts, etc.). You don't need Michael Bay-esque explosions and stunts to make a meaningful, entertaining film. Ever see Dan In Real Life? Limited locations, a small (yet extremely talented) cast, and no special FX. Let Dan be your guide.
5. Use affordable camera equipment that you can either buy or rent for cheap. Canon DSLRs are a great, low-cost solution to obtaining cinematic looking footage whilst costing next to nothing, and just about ever good DP will know how to use them. Shoot, they all probably own their own cameras too. Get the best possible image for the lowest possible price.
Depending on the genre, format, and length of your film, this list can get pretty lengthy. But these 5 tips are a good place to start. If you revisit your project and realize that the biggest money eaters are written directly into the script--and it isn't your script--then I'd have a good heart-to-heart with your writer and figure things out before cameras start rolling. Good luck!
Relevant cost is that cost which is required for the specific decision making process or the cost which will be change due to specific decision while irrelevant cost has no concern with decision making or any specific decision.
Relevant cost is that cost which is necessary for the underlying decision in decision making process while irrelevant cost is not necessary to be decision to be made.
The reventle revealed Avatar created by James Cameron cost $500 million to make, making it the most expensive movie ever made, totally beating the $228 million that the Titanic cost.
Some of the more popular downloadable movie making software are named VirtualDub, Wax, Blender, MovieStorm, Movica, and DVD Knife. One will need to research to software in order to find out if there is a cost involved.
-- cost -- popular support
-- cost -- popular support
Cost concept for Decision making ?
On average, the cost of a ticket to a movie in 2011 cost $9.50.
The discount is -4.25 bringing the cost down to 21.25
The discount amount is 4.33, bringing the cost to 24.58
The first movie was viewed in Paris.There was no cost.
On Ebay there are several different stamp making accessories for $8 to $20. While actual rubber stamp making machines go for anywhere between $100 to $139.