When making a low-budget movie, it’s essential to make the most of what you have available. Writing a sweeping epic that encompasses dozens of locations and hundreds of extras is wonderful, but once you actually get down to the process of filming you’re often left with a big, empty field with a few bored kids (who had nothing better to do that day) picking their noses in the background. Locations don’t have to be expensive, but they do have the be available and accessible by cast and crew, and – ideally – far enough away from humanity that you
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