Mass Grave Pictures

Mass Grave Pictures, NYC based indie horror film productions.  #supportindiehorror 

Filmmaking On A Budget Panel

This week, we bring you the Filmmaking On A Budget panel from the Macabre Faire Film Festival, featuring indie directors Patrick Devaney, Jeremiah Kipp, and Jerry Landi. 

Whether making films on the budget of a pizza dinner, two days of shooting for 10 months of post production, to working with Hollywood actors, at the end of the day the only thing that matters is finishing the film. Patrick, Jerry and Jeremiah discuss their ups and downs of producing low-budget films over the last decade and more.

Scrubbing race cars out of your sound, ADR, mobile greenscreens, zombies on the beach, creature creation, artistic filmmaking, shorts vs features, making money, losing money, and everything in between. If you have the slightest inclination to make your own films, this panel proves that you CAN do it yourself! 

You can find Patrick Devaney here: https://www.patrickdevaneyactor.com/

You can find Jeremiah Kipp here: http://www.kippfilms.com/main.html

You can find Jerry Landi here: https://www.facebook.com/REDEYERIPS/

Subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, YouTube, Google Play, or your favorite podcatching app. And don't forget to rate and review us! Email us at filmmakingsucks@gmail.com with any questions, comments, or subjects you'd like to hear us discuss.

You can also now follow us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/filmmakingpodcast!
#FilmmakingSucks

Join the Indie Filmmaker Community on Facebook: facebook.com/groups/1798997870171718/

Listen to the HorrorHappens Radio show for current news and interviews from the genre film festivals and conventions you should have on your radar: horrorhappens.com

Sign up for ProductionNext via beta.productionnext.com/filmmakingsucks

26840902_10211186484157583_6271404238584843559_o.jpg
26730801_10155432396184856_7469128946487980603_n.jpg
I just want to make films that have enough of a budget to pull off high-level imagery but also have a budget that is low enough that I can do what I want.
— Neill Blomkamp
26961628_10215366466176397_1639405452313434112_o.jpg