MUBI brings you a great new film every day.  Start your 7-day free trial today!
Welcome to MUBI.
Your online cinema. Anytime, anywhere.
13 Feb12

AYWR: (in)Equity

by Lucas McNelly


The big news in the crowdfunding world is the U.S. House passing the
Entrepreneur Access to Capital Act. It was a rather overwhelming vote, which means that somehow Congress has found something Democrats and Republicans agree on. All by itself this is shocking. What the bill effectively does is open crowdfunding up to equity investments. Almost everyone thinks this is a fantastic thing.  


Everyone except me.


SEC regulations aren't even remotely my thing, so I'm not going to pretend I fully understand what the bill means. Other people, smarter than me, can do that for you.   They can tell you about what the new regulations would do, what extra paperwork it would inevitably involve. They can tell you more about that worrisome part where the individual states get involved. But I do have some idea how the film world works and some idea how crowdfunding works.

Let's assume for a minute that the bill allows you to sell equity stakes in your film via Kickstarter and IndieGoGo. That seems to be what everyone thinks it means. On the surface, this seems like a pretty good deal. As it stands now, people back projects for a variety of reasons, but essentially they do it to support an artist in his or her quest to create something. They don't expect anything in return, other than the promised perks. But imagine if they could make money on it. Wouldn't they be willing to give more? If there was a chance that they could get behind the next PARANORMAL ACTIVITY, logic dictates it would make it much easier to raise those funds. No one doubts that.

And really, that's kind of the problem.  


People see dollar signs and their brain just shuts off. People need money to make their films and anything that makes that easier is automatically viewed as a good thing. I understand that. Money is a great motivator. But there's more to it than that.  

The relationship between a backer and a creator is a unique one. The backers collectively give an artist the ability to create something on their own terms. The filmmaker then delivers that film and the strength or weakness of it determines whether or not the backers would be willing to support them again. Make a good film and the relationship continues. Make a shitty film and it probably won't. At the end of the day, it's the work that matters.  

Contrary to what some people will have you believe, this relationship can theoretically go on forever. If the filmmaker keeps delivering the work and keeps engaging with those backers in a meaningful way, it stands to reason that the backer pool will get deeper over time. Someone with a track record attracts a bigger audience. You could have a director make an entire career's worth of films, all of them crowdfunded, completely free of any studio system or any interference from people concerned with how their film will fare in a marketplace.

That's never before been possible. And now it is. It's the hope that there's an actual future where indie filmmakers can sustain themselves with their work.  

That's a really big deal.   

 


Now add a profit motivation to that.  


Money changes everything. Tell people they can make money off something and it becomes all they can think of. Instead of giving a filmmaker $50 and then watching from afar as they make the work, people take a more active approach to following the progress. After all, that's their $50, maybe their $100, maybe more. The entire expectation changes. They go from being benefactors to investors. And investors vote with their wallet.  

Let's say your film has 500 backers. You now have 500 investors to keep track of. 500 people who, on some level, want your film to turn a profit. 500 people who all have different ideas about how to do that. In short, you're just like a studio filmmaker, only you have to answer to a lot more people and you have a lot less money to work with.  


But in good news, it'll be easier to convince the guy you went to grade school with to give you $50. So that's something.  


Really, I don't imagine for a second that Congress has any idea what the hell they're doing. And I'm sure the law will be littered with loopholes designed to help the 1% continue fucking us all over. I'm skeptical that this reform isn't more trouble than it's worth, and I don't really see the upside. Seems to me we're just tearing down the best opportunity to create a system for filmmaker sustainability in our lifetime. And for what?

One of the discussions Kieran Roberts and I have every so often about UP COUNTRY is how to best finish the movie. It's a common discussion that every film has. Our approach is simple. Since we have no investors and no one to pay back, we can do whatever we think is best for the film. We have final cut. It's 100% up to us. We have some interesting things in the film that we can do simply because of the creative freedom given by our Kickstarter backers. Or, as I say to Kieran, "if we can't do this on a $4,000 Kickstarter film, we'll never be able to." It's really a liberating feeling. It's not something I want to give up.  

And maybe if those 108 backers were investors, that wouldn't change. I'm pretty stubborn, after all. But my gut tells me it would. I know it would muddy up the water quite a bit. I see meetings and large votes on stuff like the font of the title sequence and what festivals (if any) to submit the film to and really a bunch of nonsense that has nothing to do with making films. It's middle management. I used to work in middle management. It's neither fun nor productive.  

Filmmakers don't need that sort of group think mentality telling them how to do their jobs. Not when the system in place has so much potential for greatness.

Categories: PARANORMAL ACTIVITY, Lucas Mcnelly, AYWR, A Year Without Rent, Entrepreneur Access to Capital Act, Up Country, Kieran Roberts, Kickstarter, Indiegogo

Next Post Previous Post

Comments

Matt Patterson

on Mon 13 Feb at 08:24AM

As someone that has raised money for films using the current hybrid of traditional equity investors mixed with IndieGoGo/Kickstarter support, this concept intrigues/frightens me as well. What’s great about equity investors is they are a business partner, they believe in you and give you usually more money than a well-wisher on a crowd-funding site. However, they also want their money back (as they should!). But they beauty of crowdfunding is that you don’t pay them back the money, they gave that away in exchange for a perk. This is great for your current investors because it doesn’t water down their current investment. And it’s good to you because it does not create more pressure to make even more money back.

I’m curious how the SEC will interact with crowdfunding investments… as the law stands right now you cannot have more than 32 individual investors without having to file with the SEC. Talk about a headache if you get 120 investors through kickstarter for your little film and you suddenly now have to register with the SEC and follow their guidelines – or go to jail?! Yikes!

I’ll wait until the dust settles before making any judgements on this. I have a feeling that it will be caught in a political circle of doom and never see the light of day.

odilonvert

on Mon 13 Feb at 10:38AM

^ Great post, and equally great comment.

Personally, getting the larger financial and legal world involved here could kill this, or make it better.

I too have the feeling that time will tell what this will, in the end, turn into and whether it’s going to be more of the same for filmmakers who are trying to fund their film, or what.

PolarisDiB

on Tue 14 Feb at 05:39AM

This is really surprising, as a “joke” attempt to use crowdfunding to actually invest in equities got litigated and subsequently shut down. They said it was a joke after they got litigation — I’m pretty sure there was humor involved, but a little bit of, “But seriously, what if people just give us money that we can invest ourselves? Wouldn’t that be funny?” (By the way, if you’re thinking now something like “Wait, isn’t that what mutual funds and financial advisors are for?” Except those financial entities are regulated by the SEC and the people who work in finance have to be registered.)

This post is absolutely correct in that it will allow people who do not know how to read into a good investment to give money and then get all uppity when they lose it. Probably what will happen is that later on they’ll adjust the law (if it doesn’t already have this contingent) to state that if your project is a high-risk investment (which all movies are, for instance), then you are required by law to state so clearly on your crowdfunding page. That won’t turn off the investments, though, no better than the increasing size and bolded font of cigarette warnings on packaging detract smokers from their cancer sticks. So then the SEC will actually just start requiring each campaign that offers equity register with the SEC in advance, and I have no comment or idea about what a hassle that may or may not be.

Growing pains, in other words. I’m not sure this is such a bad or good thing, and yes, the 1% will use it just as well as fraudsters and get-rich-quick-schemestars and pyramid-schemers and the people who use every single communications technology ever to rip people off. Nothing new behind that. All I know is that I’m careful with my money, so will probably not make equity crowdfunding an investment choice. That said, I have already given money to production in hopes of a monetary return, but it was a direct loan to be repaid back whether the movie fails or not and the person I lent it to and I discussed it for several weeks and cross-referenced each other’s liability and wrote out contracts and everything. p2p lending has ALWAYS been legal (and high risk!), so there’s that sense in which this is not really all that new.

—PolarisDiB