Thanks Ben.
I have been speaking with Jr. and I'm going to interview him in October when it cools down and the leaves start turning colors (so it will make for a good backdrop). He's a real nice guy for sure.
But like I said, I haven't the money to travel to visit everyone with a bow collection. These things cost a lot of money and I can't find resources in the way of grants or underwriting for this film.
I'm going to be honest with you. No one seems to care about archery history or Ben Pearson outside of a small group. The larger population of bow hunters, non traditional, is what is carrying archery and they have no concern with the old days. They just want the Ultra 5000 Magnum Super Duper XXX compound bow that came out the last week.
I haven't even been able to get the archery trade association on board with this project and they are the folks that fund shooting programs for youth.
Cabelas TV network that produces outdoor shows for cable TV passed on the idea. And most organizations that give out documentary film grants have no concern with regional historical films outside of the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 60s.
So, right now, after I pay my rent tomorrow, I will have $150 in my bank account to make this film with. I don't think $150 is going to go very far.
It's going to take me around $5-$6,000 to travel across the country and interview the big names in the archery world and others. Then I have archival 8mm and 16mm home video I'm going to have to pay to be scanned into 1080p HD video files that will cost me between $6,000 and $10,000.
Then I'm going to have to pay around $1,000 for music scoring for the film. Software upgrades are going to cost me about $1,500 for graphics generation and add-on packages.
I'm going to have my living expenses to keep up with that will run me about $15,000 for the next twelve months.
I have $20,000 in debt invested in my new HD video equipment and editing setup.
When the film gets finished I'm going to pay around $1,500 for DVD printing and packaging for 1,000 initial copies of the film.
Then I will need around $3,000-5,000 for film festival entries across the country and in Canada. I won't be able to afford the European festivals outside of Germany. There is a traditional archery following in Germany I believe.
Then if I win awards from those festivals then I will have to pay royalties to use their wreaths on my DVD packaging to show it's an award-winning film. That usually runs between $500-1,000 a year depending on the festival.
So, if we add all of that up I'm looking at a production cost of around $58,000 when you factor in my $20,000 worth of equipment.
How am I going to come up with $58,000? I have no clue brother. But I'm going to do the film anyway because I think Ben Pearson deserves it. The man did a lot for my hometown when he was running things. He made for a lot of jobs and gave Arkansas great products to market for decades.
I'm proud of the man and I wish he was still around because I'd love to meet him.