AFM-25: How Film Financing Really Works Today — Pre-Sales vs. True MG Deals
This year I attended AFM-25, and the difference between this market and previous years was striking. I also participated in AFM-2023, where I rented a booth as the Law Offices of Ernest Goodman. That year was productive in terms of meeting people, but everyone remembers how chaotic the venue was. Many meetings happened in crowded hotel hallways, and the elevator system at the previous location simply could not handle the number of attendees. People spent twenty or thirty minutes waiting for an elevator just to get to their next appointment. The environment was not designed for serious business.
The move to Century City completely transformed the atmosphere. The new venue offered wide, open hallways, real meeting spaces, quiet corners where you can sit down and talk with producers or sales agents, and overall a much more professional and polished environment. The change was dramatic. For the first time, AFM felt like a market where deals could actually be made efficiently.
But beyond the better location, something even more important became clear: the business models have shifted. Many companies at AFM-25 presented themselves as distributors or production companies, but when you dig into their actual offer, they were functioning as sales agents, not true distributors. This misunderstanding is the root of enormous confusion among filmmakers, because the way these companies talk about “financing” and “paying upfront money” often makes their deals sound like Minimum Guarantees. In reality, most AFM companies this year were offering pre-sale cashflow financing, not acquisitions.
To explain this difference, I’ll use a real example that several companies discussed with me at the market: a $2.5M romantic comedy with recognizable actors attached.
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