Arts & Entertainment
Martin Scorsese’s Tips for Shooting a Low-Budget Movie
Written by MasterClass
Last updated: Aug 25, 2021 • 2 min read
Award-winning director Martin Scorsese is known for his mob epics and polished period pieces, but he’s also made a few low-budget films in his decades-long career. Aspiring filmmakers can use these tips from the veteran filmmaker to gain further insight on how to make movies on a small budget.
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Martin Scorsese’s Tips for Shooting a Low-Budget Movie
Below, find some of Scorsese’s insights and tips for making movies on a small budget.
- Use the speed and simplicity of a low budget shoot to your advantage. Though many new filmmakers make films on a small budget out of necessity, sometimes a low budget can contribute to a film’s aesthetic. Scorsese shot his absurdist film After Hours on a compressed schedule for a small budget. He describes how this production process fit with the aesthetic and narrative of the whole film: “I wanted to get something trimmer and faster, you know. And so I felt I should go back to independent-style filmmaking. We shot it in 40 nights averaging maybe 26 setups a day.”
- Do the legwork in pre-production. One of the most important steps for making low budget films is pre-production. Because you are working with limited time and resources, having a detailed plan for how production will run on any single shoot day is crucial. Planning camera movements and camera angles with a storyboard is a very important parts of Scorsese’s process. He describes how integral the storyboard process was in making his biblical drama The Last Temptation of Christ: “The whole picture was designed on paper … because I knew that if I had the chance to make the picture, it was going to be very, very low budget. And I had to shoot very quickly so I had to know exactly what I wanted in terms of the framing, camera movements, editing and that sorta thing.”
- Don’t schedule more than you can handle. When learning how to make a movie on a low budget, it’s important to be realistic about your schedule and the amount you can get done on any given day. Whether you’re making a short film or a feature, it’s important to not overschedule your production days. If your production calendar is short, you might need to cut some camera setups. It’s important to objectively evaluate if any given close up or wide angle is truly necessary, or if you’ll be able to make do with what you have. Here Scorsese discusses how he dealt with a compressed schedule on Last Temptation of Christ: “We were under such pressure, particularly because we were gone days over schedule and were running out of money. I remember ... going through all the shots and saying, ‘Okay, instead of three days for these 75 shots, we have two.’ So. What could we lose? And it became 50 shots, 25 and 25. And we got them all.”
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