I've always worked very efficiently on small budgets, both in documentaries and in features.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
That's one of the benefits of working on big budget films. You work with people who have a lot of experience and you get to learn a lot.
I've worked on films where the budgets are almost limitless and you're in trailers that are bigger than a hotel room. You're taken care of and the food is amazing, the quality of the job is amazing and then you work on smaller things but it never dictates my happiness or my willingness to go to work.
I hope to always be doing some low budget things.
I tend to make low-budget movies but, yeah, I make more money than I ever thought I would make.
I like to keep my budgets at a certain price when I work for someone else, and even more so now that I'm working for myself, and use new technologies to deliver films that look like they have high production levels.
As long as you keep your budgets small, there's a way of making films.
I really enjoy working on small films.
The good thing about feature films is that the budgets tend to scale.
I think everything you do, whether it's low budget things when you're first starting out or full feature films or when you're working with Hollywood, you're always learning, all the time.
I was able to lean on people for favors and things to help out because their budget was so low. It was half of what John Travolta's perk package is on a film. Our whole budget was half of what his staff makes on a film.
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