Please note that I have no doubt that the following list is indeed the lines to cross to get the unfortunate attention of CBS/Paramount. I am merely expressing my personal feelings regarding these limitations...Reading those guidelines I suspect a fan production could actually get away with quite a lot as long as they don't cross certain lines.
I agree. The fan community should celebrate the original property, not subsist off of it. If you want to profit off a franchise you don't own the copyright to, negotiate a legal license with the rights holder beforehand.- Don't monetize or try to profit from your production. No rewards, prizes or merchandise derived from your work.
There are three things that concern me about this:- Don't get overly ambitious with crowdfunding.
- You might as well not even include "with crowdfunding", as your budget will create a ceiling on what they can achieve. If one has ambitions for their film, and they don't plan their finances accordingly, they're a fool.
- Once you hit your funding goal, are there any crowdfunding sites that allow you to create a funding "ceiling"? If not, your project can overshoot the "line" just by being too popular.
- There seems to be the presumption ambition and monitization go hand-in-hand. While I do believe there is a certain amount of temptation with larger sums of money, there are fan film projects that have demonstrated that they can use their resources responsibly.
This is completely reasonable, especially with projects that start to approach the quality of the official stuff.- Make certain you identify your work clearly as a fan production and don't seek to mislead people into thinking you have any sort of official capacity.
If you're already putting "a Star Trek fan film" in the title and/or prominently feature a disclaimer at the beginning of your film, I don't see where the confusion comes from. I think this more to do with the fact that more fan films like Aurora and STC could take eyeballs off of Discovery, which is entirely possible without any confusion over whether or not they're "official". I find the idea of limiting the quality and length of fan films because they could potentially eclipse the quality of official franchise content highly disturbing.- Avoid film or full episode type running times--leave that to CBS/Paramount--to avoid any possible confusion that your work might be considered official.
Your resume shouldn't determine whether or not you can make a fan film. It's a violation of the concept of equal protection.- Refrain from utilizing the services of any professionals previously or currently associated with official Trek.