nightowl wrote:I discovered he is now shooting Youth in Revolt and have already mailed out a request to that set. Fingers crossed that he will sign it. He has been pretty good. I have seen PP and authentic through his agency. So I figure vv should guarantee me an authentic if he decides to sign VV. I don't see why not if he is nice enough to sign through the other address in the database.
Good luck! {thumb2}
nightowl wrote: That's interesting about films shooting 2 months. When I first started collecting in January virtually every film I looked up was shooting three months, and then there was the rare 4-6 week shoot. Or the rare 5-6 month shoot.
Yeah, the general shooting schedule is roughly 2 months or the 4-6 weeks on a lot of films. You'll always get those films that have a longer shoot time for certain reasons though.
nightowl wrote: It's too bad that not all sources provide the production run. Not knowing whether they wrap in 4 weeks or 4 months does make a big difference for collectors.
You could look at that in two different perspectives. If it's a short shoot then sometimes you're more likely to get something back, especially if not a lot of people know about it. Then with the longer shoot, it can be a hit or miss. The longer you have to send, depending on the actor's signing history you can look at the possibility of having a slimmer chance of receiving anything since everyone will end up sending/finding out about it. It can be a hit or miss or a win-win situation in both, but the above is solely my opinion.
[quote="nightowl"]I discovered he is now shooting Youth in Revolt and have already mailed out a request to that set. Fingers crossed that he will sign it. He has been pretty good. I have seen PP and authentic through his agency. So I figure vv should guarantee me an authentic if he decides to sign VV. I don't see why not if he is nice enough to sign through the other address in the database. [/quote]
Good luck! {thumb2}
[quote="nightowl"] That's interesting about films shooting 2 months. When I first started collecting in January virtually every film I looked up was shooting three months, and then there was the rare 4-6 week shoot. Or the rare 5-6 month shoot.[/quote]
Yeah, the general shooting schedule is roughly 2 months or the 4-6 weeks on a lot of films. You'll always get those films that have a longer shoot time for certain reasons though.
[quote="nightowl"] It's too bad that not all sources provide the production run. Not knowing whether they wrap in 4 weeks or 4 months does make a big difference for collectors.[/quote]
You could look at that in two different perspectives. If it's a short shoot then sometimes you're more likely to get something back, especially if not a lot of people know about it. Then with the longer shoot, it can be a hit or miss. The longer you have to send, depending on the actor's signing history you can look at the possibility of having a slimmer chance of receiving anything since everyone will end up sending/finding out about it. It can be a hit or miss or a win-win situation in both, but the above is solely my opinion.