The Age of Stupid Funding FAQ

Q: Why are you crowd-funding The Age of Stupid?
Q: Will it be a better film?
Q: Will more people see it?
Q: Who will get rich if The Age of Stupid is a smash hit?
Q: How much will the film cost?
Q: Isn't that a low budget for a big movie?
Q: How much have you already spent?
Q: How much more is needed?
Q: Who has already invested?
Q: What's the difference between investing and donating?
Q: Why are they loans not shares?
Q: Who can invest?
Q: I'd like to invest but don't have enough money. Can I buy a smaller share?
Q: What will I get in return?
Q: Can I really star in the film?
Q: What percentage will I get?
Q: Will my percentage be diluted if more people invest?
Q: How much does The Age of Stupid need to take for me to get my money back?
Q: What are the repayment terms?
Q: Is my investment tax deductible?
Q: Do I get a receipt?
Q: Can't Gordon give you a few quid?
Q: What are the risk factors?
Q: Would I make more money investing in oil?
Q: What happens if you're under-subscribed?
Q: And over-subscribed?
Q: What happens to my money if you don't finish the film?
Q: Why should I trust that you'll give me my cash?
Q: What's the best case scenario?
Q: And the worst?
Q: Any secondary bonuses?
Q: What does anyone else think?
Q: I don't trust the internet. Can I pay by cheque?
Q: Can I speak to a human before I part with my cash?
Q: I'm convinced. How do I give you my money?

 

 



A: Why are you crowd-funding The age of stupid?

Our ultimate aim in making The Age of Stupid is to help bring about the exponential change in global awareness needed to force governments to introduce legislation which cuts global carbon emissions by 60% and allows life to continue on this planet. Gotta aim high, right?

Funding the film independently helps us achieve this, we hope, in three main ways:

  • 1) What the film says
  • 2) Who sees it
  • 3) Who gets the cash

 



A: Will it be a better film?

Should be. As we're making it completely independently, we don't have any Executive Producers or Money Men telling us what film we should be making. Or to hurry up and finish to fit with their deadlines. Or to tone it down because their advertisers won't like it.

 



A: Will more people see it?

The usual way to raise the budget for a documentary like The Age of Stupid is from organisations like The Film Council or Film Four or from TV broadcasters like the BBC or Channel 4. Which is how The Age of Stupid producer John Battsek has financed his feature docs in the past. But there's a major drawback. If a broadcaster commissions you to make a film, it is basically their film. They own most or all the copyright. And whoever owns the rights gets to decide how the film is distributed.

But by crowd-funding The Age of Stupid we control 100% of the copyright, allowing us to distribute the film as far and wide as our imaginations allow.

For example, as Franny made ‘McLibel’ independently she owned 100% of the rights. So she can sign whatever distribution deals she wants whenever and wherever she pleases. Meaning 34 million people have now seen it on TV, internet and cable, and at colleges, film festivals and cinema. But a drama version of McLibel was also made by Channel 4. Much to the producer’s frustration, it wasn't distributed internationally, so only about 650,000 people saw it on UK TV. The Producer isn't even allowed to distribute copies on DVD. That would be a fate worse than climate change for The Age of Stupid.

Of course we're not saying we're going to literally distribute it ourselves. The aim is to get to the end of production with 100% of the rights, which we will then sell to whichever international distributor comes up with the best plan to get the most people to see it. We will also be extremely careful to make a deal which still allows us to distribute the film through schools, on the web and whathaveyou.

 



A: Who will get rich if The Age of Stupid is a smash hit?

John has made some of the most high profile documentaries of recent years. ‘One Day in September’ won the Oscar for Best Documentary and ‘Live Forever’ destroyed several forests in press coverage. So you might imagine he is rich. But when those funding bodies pay you to make a film for them, they also wrap up the finances. First, they insist that the initial money taken by the film goes to repay their investment. Which is often the only money that comes in. And second, if the film does repay all it’s production costs and goes on to make a profit, guess who gets most of it? For example, ‘Touching the Void’ is financially the most successful British doc of all time. It took an estimated US $10 million at the box office, none of which has filtered down to the filmmakers.

It'll be a different story on The Age of Stupid. Everybody who works (above a minimum) or invests in the film will own a slice of the pie. So if The Age of Stupid is the smash hit we’re dreaming of, the people who will benefit, money-wise, are those who made it, those who star in it and those who financed it. If we make enough to help fund future related projects & films, even better.

Also, if we succeed in raising the whole budget independently, there will be no debts or financiers taking their cut before we can start sharing out the profits - unlike most deferred payment films which are saddled with a million quid or so in debt.

We ran a similar scheme on McLibel and we have been making percentage profit payments to the original crew for 6 years now. <!-- br-->

 



A: How much will the film cost?

£515,000 in total. We've spent £230K of the £250K initially raised and now need another £200K for completion. (We are planning to get the rest from a government tax break). See the budget for more detail.



A: Isn't that a low budget for a big movie?

£515,000 is approximately a third of the cost of an equivalent production. We are able to do this, without any loss in the quality of the final product, because:

* The crew will mostly work at 1/3 fees (often minimum wage) plus a % of profits.
* The production company will not take a production fee (usually 10-15% of the budget).
* We have most of the skills and equipment in-house.
* We’ve had a lot of practise making documentaries on low budgets.

 



A: How much have you already spent?

£254,820 in 3 years on 17 filming trips and getting on for 100 crew.

As of June 2007, all the documentary filming has been completed - 300 hours shot over 3 years of filming in Nigeria, New Orleans, India, The Alps, Jordan and Cornwall - a two hour rough cut has been edited, the animation is underway and the orchestral score is being composed. As soon as post-production is completed, we will start on a nine-month publicity blitz: maximising exposure in the mainstream press, as well as through schools, festivals, campaigning groups and of course the internet.

See the expenditure listed here.



A: How much more is needed?

We need £200,000 to finish the film and get it to the distributors. This will cover the final edit, animation, orchestra recording, archive, graphics, music licensing, legal checking, website, post-production and mastering.

See the budget for more detail.



A: Who has already invested?

184 lovely people as of June 2007. Mainly individuals, but also couples, families, groups of friends, hockey teams, a health centre and one woman buying four "shares" for her four god-children.

Some of the investors have made their own pages on the site.

 



A: What's the difference between investing and donating?

If you invest you get a percentage of the profits. If you donate you don’t.

Clearly, donating is very helpful to us as it means that we have percentages of the film "spare" which we can then use to persuade pop stars, animators, actors, archive libraries and flash post-production houses to work with us for relatively miniscule payments.



A: Who can invest?

Everybody. If you can’t manage £2,500 alone, syndicates of friends/ families/ colleagues are more than welcome. A syndicate can be an individual or a family or any other group - in the last round we had a hockey team and an alternative health centre clubbing together. But we need one person as the named individual on the loan agreement and we will only make one payement each year, so you’d have to make an agreement between yourselves as to who would take on the responsibility of sharing out the cash (if there is any).

 



A: Why are they loans not shares?

Our lawyers tell us that, technically, they are “limited recourse debentures”, but we’re allowed to refer to them as loans. They're definitely not shares which are something to do with the stockmarket and shareholders and all that stuff we steer a million miles from.

 



A: I'd like to invest but don't have enough money. Can I buy a smaller share?

We’ve already got 184 investors to send cheques to every year - not to mention the 100-odd crew. So really it’s for admin reasons that £2,500 is the minimum investment. The initial funders bought their “shares” for £500 but they invested on an idea alone – there was nothing to show them at that stage.

If you don't have £2,500 you can donate any amount over £20. Or you could form a syndicate and pool your cash. We can put you in touch with other people if you’re interested in being part of a syndicate.

 

 



A: What will I get in return?

You will get some or all of the benefits listed below, depending on your level of donation/investment. See table of benefits below.

  Warm Fuzzy Feeling
Credit on Website
Credit on film & DVD
Chance to Star in the film
0.125% of profits 0.25% of profits
1.25% of profits
2 Tickets to Premiere
DONATE                
£20-99 YES YES            
£100-499 YES YES ON DVD          
£500+ YES YES YES YES        
INVEST                
 £2,500 YES YES YES YES  YES      
£5,000 YES YES YES YES    YES    
 £25,000   YES YES YES YES      YES  YES

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Credit on website: Everyone gets their name listed on the website. If you invest (minimum £2,500) or donate over £500 you can also have your own page, if you'd like one. You can put whatever you like up there, within reason, and as long as it is not offensive. See some examples here .

Credit on DVD: You will get a credit on the DVD. You can decide what name you want credited. For example you could buy a credit for someone else as a birthday present so they can see their name on the DVD.

Credit on film: You will get an onscreen credit at the end of the film. You can decide what name you want credited. For example you could buy a credit for someone else as a birthday present so they can see their name on the film . NB: In some scenarios it will not be possible to display all credits as the broadcasters take control of the credits – for example on UK TV they limit the credits so some credits may not appear.

Chance to Star in the Film: You will get a chance to feature in The Age of Stupid. See details of this opportunity here .

2 tickets to a screening: You will get two tickets to a screening. We will endeavour to make sure you are invited to your nearest one.

For the small print please see the Letter of Agreement if you are planning to invest or Donating Terms & Conditions if you’re thinking of donating.

Additionally everyone who donates or invests will be included on the Age of Stupid mailing list.



A: Can I really star in the film?

Well….maybe.....

Everybody who invests or donates over £500 gets a chance to be in the film. We will put the names of all eligible funders into a hat and draw a winner. A clip of the winner will be filmed and included in the final film. If the winner is in London, or can get to London by a low-carbon mode of transport - ie without travelling by car or plane - we will film them ourselves. Otherwise we will organise for them to be filmed. See small print here.

 



A: What percentage will I get?

£5,000 investment = 0.25% of net profits.

£10,000 = 0.5%.

£20,000 = 1%.

NB. The first round of The Age of Stupid loans were worth double these percentages, to reflect the greater risk of investing at the beginning.

 


A: Will my percentage be diluted when more people invest?

No. You 'own' a set percentage of The Age of Stupid's net profits for 10 years after completion of the film. This percentage can not change under any circumstance and certainly not if more people invest in the film. (In fact you're more likely to see a return on your investment if lots of people invest as it means we'll have enough cash to make the best possible film). See the Letter of Agreement for further details.

 



A: How much does the film need to take for me to get my money back?

The Production loans will all be repaid in full when/if the film makes £2 million net profit.

PAYMENT FORECAST

AOS net Income

0.5% Profit Payment

1% Profit Payment

2% Profit Payment

100,000

500 1000

2000

1,000,000

5,000 10,000

20,000

2,000,000 10,000 20,000

40,000

5,000,000 25,000 50,000

100,000

       

 

EXAMPLES:

‘Super Size Me’ took £29 million* , ‘March of the Penguins’ took £63 million* and ‘Fahrenheit 911’, the biggest documentary of all time, has already taken £137 million* and is expected to rake in another £90 million in DVD sales and broadcast fees. (Before you get too excited, Franny’s film ‘Drowned Out’ took only about £80,000 in gross revenue.) But then again John sold two films at Sundance this year for a combined total of 4 Million US Dollars.

* Gross revenue. If you take off the share for exhibitors and distributors, net revenue equates to something in the region of 20% of gross.

 



A: What are the repayment terms?

* Lenders will be paid annually for 10 years following completion of the film. A written report will be included.
* Payments made will be subject to United Kingdom taxation. Lenders will be responsible for declaring their income on their tax returns.
* See the Letter of Agreement for further details

 



A: Is my investment tax deductible?

No. We investigated the possibility of setting up this up and discovered it would cost £6,000. Not enough investors in Stage 2 were interested so we decided to use the cash for making the film instead.

 



A: Do I get a receipt?

If you'd like one.

 



A: Can't Gordon give you a few quid?

The British Government has announced new proposals for tax incentives for film production, which may mean up to £40,000 for The Age of Stupid. To qualify, a film has to be certified as culturally British under a new culture test. Films that pass the cultural test will only qualify for the new relief if a minimum proportion of the production expenditure will be spent on UK goods and services and will be calculated on the amount of the UK spend. The relief is intended to encourage production companies to make use of the UK film infrastructure.

We are applying for the Certificate of Britishness in Oct 2007 and will hopefully get the tax rebate after that.

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A: What are the risk factors?

This is a high risk investment, there’s no getting round it. Here’s the top three ways you might end up kissing goodbye to your cash:

* We make a turkey. If The Age of Stupid doesn’t make two million pounds, you don’t get all your money back. But you will still have helped make a film which (hopefully) millions of people will see and which (hopefully) will change millions of attitudes.

* Death/ Illness of key crew. We can’t guarantee against Franny falling off a mountain while getting the ultimate melting glacier shot, or John getting shot by an oil company, in which case your money will be as good as lost. But we’re not the giving up types. Franny spent the first night of filming ‘Drowned Out’ in jail and was let out with the warning never to return. (She went back three times over the next four years). And John persuaded a Palestinion terrorist to speak on camera for the first time after 25 years in hiding.

* Other Funders. We may be unable to raise the complete budget from private investors or pre-sales to broadcasters. Which may mean we have to turn to funding bodies such as The Film Council, who will most likely insist that they are repaid from the first income. In this scenario, we would be unable to repay our private investors until the funding body had recouped their investment. But we really don’t want to tie ourselves up like this and will do our very best not to take their money. Besides, if we do manage to raise all the money from individuals, it’s one more angle for the media assault when the film comes out..

 



A: Would I make more money investing in oil?

Yes. If money is your main aim, don’t invest in The Age of Stupid.

 



A: What happens if you're under-subscribed?

We'll still make the film, it just won't be as good.

 



A: And over-subscribed?

It’s first come first served, so hurry hurry roll up roll up etc. We were over-subscribed first time round, but everyone who missed out will hopefully be able to invest this time. We actually had to toss a coin to decide who would snap up the last of the 100 Stage 1 shares as we had two investors fighting over it!

 



A: What happens to my money if you don't finish the film?

We repay you a share of any unspent money left over. That's it. You've lost the rest.

 



A: Why should I trust that you'll give me my cash?

We sign a legal agreement between us. You can read them here: Investing and Donating.

 



A: What's the best case scenario?

We make a hit documentary on the scale of 'Fahrenheit 911' or 'March of the Penguins'. All the investors get fat cheques for ten years. The crew buy themselves new cameras and lifetime osteopath passes. 200 local climate campaigns get funding. Spanner Films and Passion Pictures go on holiday.... ... and the public wake up to the impending climate disaster, governments round the world are overthrown, all oil companies immediately divert all profits to renewable energy research and a new international agreement is signed reducing carbon dioxide emissions by 60% by 2030 (80% for big polluters like the UK).

 



A: And the worst?

Runaway climate change. And, terrifyingly, the latest science shows that we are just a few years away from hitting the point of no return where the positive feedbacks start and global temperatures go from 2 to 3 to 4 to 5 to 6 degrees. By which point most of the life on the planet will have died.

But in terms of your money, the worst case scenario is that The Age of Stupid is a total turkey, you don't get a penny back, we've wasted years of effort, nobody watches the film and it has no impact whatsoever on carbon emissions.



A: Any secondary bonuses?

Climate change is humanity's biggest problem, for sure, but there are any number of other pressing issues which also need great documentaries. As the mainstream media becomes more and more corporate-controlled, independent documentaries are one of the few remaining ways to deliver alternative ideas to tens of millions of people. One commentator called them “the new rock and roll”. It’s hard to think of any other way in which the ideas in Michael Moore’s ‘Fahrenheit 911’ could have found that global audience. Equally, independent docs can be a very effective way for philanthropists to affect social change, if they are able to find filmmakers working on the subjects they care about.

As one of our first round of investors said, “It’s hard to think of another social investment which would return as much bang for my bucks”. So we would be very happy if, as a side effect of The Age of Stupid, we inspired other filmmakers to copy this funding model, take on the big issues, sidestep the corporate control of the media and get millions of people watching films that matter. We will certainly take every opportunity to highlight our financing model when The Age of Stupid is released. (There has already been one newspaper article - in Denmark, weirdly - about it). To this end, alongside the main documentary, we are writing The Film's Diaries, hopefully for publication, as well as The Making Of companion documentary.

From our point of view, an unexpected bonus of the funding scheme has been the support, encouragement and bloody good ideas we've received from the community of 184 "Age of Stupid Insiders".



A: What does anyone else think?

Quotes from some of our investors here.

 



A: I don't trust the internet. Can I pay by cheque OR BANK TRANSFER?

You certainly can. To donate, please make your cheque payable to "Crude" and post to: BCM Spanner Films, London WC1N 3XX, UK (yes, that is a mailing address). Please include a note with the exact name you'd like for your credit. If you'd like to donate by bank transfer our details are:

Bank Name: The Co-operative Bank
Bank Address: PO Box 250, Delf House, Southway, Skelmersdale, WN8 6WT
Account Name: One Off Productions Limited Trading as CRUDE
Sort Code: 08-92-99
Account Number: 69228399

To invest, follow the instructions here.

 



A: Can I speak to a human before I give you my cash?

Sure. Contact The Age of Stupid producer lizzie@ageofstupid.net



A: I'm convinced. How do I give you my money?

Donate here or Invest here.

 

IMPORTANT NOTICE

This webpage is provided for your information but is subject to change and does not bind OOPS to any of the content herein. This webpage does not constitute or form part of any loan or donation agreement nor shall it or any part of it or the fact of its distribution form the basis of, or be relied on in connection with, any contract therefore. No advice on investments is given on this webpage or by the promoter in relation to it. If any person has any doubt about the suitability of the investment which is the subject of this webpage he/she should contact an appropriate authorised person for advice on investments. No responsibility is accepted by any of Oops for any errors, mis-statements in, or omissions from, this webpage nor for any direct or consequential loss howsoever arising from any use of, or reliance on, this webpage or otherwise in connection with it.


TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR DONATING


Read em here.

 

LETTER OF AGREEMENT FOR INVESTING

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