A Year Without Rent / The iPhotographr
by Lucas McNelly
For every film I work on, there's usually a Twitter hashtag or account dedicated to the film (What if there's no hashtag or account? That's a red flag.) where people will post stuff that's going on. Some films it's just me posting and on some films (like FAVOR), the Twitter feed is pretty active. You'd think the Twitter activity on a film wouldn't have any correlation at all to the quality of the production, but it does. Maybe that's because you'd be a damned fool to be a filmmaker without a Twitter account, but there's something to it. FAT KID RULES THE WORLD is pretty active. There's @FatKidMovie, of course, and Matthew Lillard (@lillardmatthew), but also lead actor Jacob Wysocki (@JacobWysocki) and his movie dad Billy Campbell (@WOCampbell) have been tweeting regularly about the film.

Who doesn't love a good mystery?
Then I looked at the account a little closer and pieced it together. @TheiPhotographr was very likely Key Grip Patrick Barcroft. It made a lot of sense. They were the type of photos you could only get if you were right in the middle of the production, and a key grip would be that guy. Plus, they're really good photos.

But let's think about that for a minute. Here you've got a Key Grip (and, from what I can tell, a good one) who posts a production photo or two a day from your shoot. He's got followers (461, as I write this) who are going to get a very small, but very pretty window into your production. It's kind of like A Year Without Rent, without the risk of someone writing that your production is a clusterfuck. Basically, he's going to make you look good.

I think this is the future of production. Instead of being a rarity, people like Patrick are going to be the norm. You'll have a crew full of people sharing photos and thoughts from your production. They'll all bring their own built-in audiences along with them and it'll be the production's job to maximize that contribution. Some productions will clamp down and try to control it in the same way that corporations try and get their employees to toe a line, but the smart ones will give them free reign. Sure, they'll give parameters like "don't reveal the killer", but it won't be much more than that. And the productions will be better for it. They'll have an easier time of finding their audiences because the audience will come from the processes that get the film made in the first place.
Plus, they'll draw better crews.

Of course it does.
It's more than that. Social media is going to influence your choice of a Key Grip and on down the line. Everything else being equal, would you rather have Patrick or someone with 10 followers on Twitter who hasn't posted in 6 months?

And it's not as simple as requiring people to post stuff on social media sites, like a lot of productions are doing now. That's a band-aid, and not a very good one. There's no really incentive to engage with people, which is the key benefit. The posts come off a perfunctory and they accomplish almost nothing other than looking desperate. You're better off having them do nothing.
Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter:@lmcnelly.
Comments
Peter Rinaldi
This is a joke, right? Please say you’re joking. [crickets] You’re not joking. Oy vey.
samnorton
You need to bear in mind that this is from the perspective of someone who’s spent a long time on the road, on shoots defining his life by interactions formed largely on social media. I’m sure an aspect of this is to keep the ball rolling and have people reminded that donations are needed to keep on, but I do agree with Peter’s fairly succinct response – There isn’t a correlation between an active production twitter account and the quality of the project because marketing and filmmaking aren’t the same thing. A lot of great filmmakers don’t have a strong desire for their stuff to be seen. Or rather, it’s not the motivating factor. However, I can see that if you’re using twitter as a tool to find productions, the more professional ones are more likely to be active. The bottom line for me is that a good production and a professional production aren’t the one and the same.
Lucas McNelly
I wish I could agree with you, but a strong social media presence from the director is, in my experience, the #1 indicator of a well-run set. I can’t figure it out either, but I have theories.
Peter Rinaldi
You can’t listen to me. I have 7 followers on twitter, 17 tweets total and I don’t, and never have, owned a cell phone of any kind. In your assessment I am f*cking Ed Wood.
Peter Rinaldi
My last tweet was about how my film is playing (tomorrow actually) at the Quad in NYC. But that was October 8th!!!! Look! @Peter_Rinaldi
Shameful!