I've seen some five minute short films which have more "meat" on them than some 2 hour movies. All it takes is a talented writer and director who knows how to use their time well.It's going to have to be proven.
When I sit back to watch a story unfold in an egaging way I want and need some meat to it. I'm not interested in seeing a collection of unrelated vignettes.
I speak only for myself. The vast majority of fanfilms don't interest me. If the ones that do interest me are castrated and pushed into oblivion then it will take something absolutely amazing to bring me back.
Just look at the Intrepid short posted up threat.
That seems to me like the ideal way to go about it.Maybe fan films could adopt a practice from Doctor Who and tell one story in a total of 30 minutes but have a cliff-hanger at the end of the first 15 minute mark?!
That was great. I haven't see any of Intrepid stuff before this, but now I might have to.At risk of hawking my own crap (sorry), I think this is a pretty good example of a solid short film that fits well within the fifteen minutes. It also didn't cost us $50,000. And we're certainly not the only ones producing films like this.
The guidelines basically mean we can do a lot more of this type of storytelling, and I for one am more than happy with that.
I'm still a little confused about the whole series thing. Are you guys absolutely sure you're OK to continue with ongoing characters and ships and such?
I would assume that the guidline would mean that you can not have any connections between fan films at all.
So if your first film is about Capt. Smith and the USS XX fighting Klingons in the Alpha Quadrtant, then your next one would have to be about Capt. Doe and the USS YY fighting Romulans in the Beta Quadrant.