I want to take out a 6,000 dollar loan (possibly from Bank of America) however, it's for personal use, specifically
buying film equipment to start my film business, I'm wondering what would be the best option?
Not exact matches
Franco's
film dives into the insane folly of Tommy's passion project, how he
buys, not rents, all of his shooting
equipment, incurring massive costs for no other reason than to look like a big shot, or how he has a fake alleyway constructed to look exactly like the one outside the shooting stage.
Based on Ernest Pérochon's 1924 novel, the
film follows women who struggle to maintain a family farm, doing backbreaking work and
buying new
equipment while trying to envision life after wartime.
Wiseau decides to
buy rather than rent
equipment and opts to shoot simultaneously on
film and in digital video.
They hold casting sessions,
buy camera
equipment (Wiseau's insisted the
film be shot in both 35 mm and HD, even way back in 2003, much to the delight of the
equipment sales reps), crew up, and start shooting.
This figure was the result of such senseless cost overruns as Wiseau's choice to
buy rather than rent his cameras and lighting
equipment and to shoot every scene both on 35 mm
film and digital video, not to mention his propensity for showing up hours late to his own set every day.