At last, we've come to the epic finale of our film journey. Hopefully, as a protagonist of this course, you've battled through the sheets of paper, resume drafts, and website designs better with your inner demons by identifying your weaknesses and leveraging your strengths and pick the red box, not the white box to enter the matrix. And if you skip all the way to this part, then all of that just sounded like gibberish to you. Anyway, welcome to the final section of the course. You've made it the climax of the film, you are all Telly presently paid off. I'm now going to give you the tidbits and snacks on what really matters in Hollywood as someone who is in the industry itself.
Firstly, credits matter. If you had not gotten the hints from some of the earlier sections, I'm directly telling you now that credits do matter. What you choose to put on your IMDB page or credits is key in Hollywood. So as much as your student or independent short film that got submitted to a film festival is cool, and a nice nod to your work and skills, Hollywood is really focused on big name credits, namely big actors, big studios, or big budget. Basically anything big Hollywood likes. To address us.
Once again, be selective of your projects and what you choose to put on your resume and real put your best and highly rated or high credibility film at the emphasis on your resume or portfolio. Always prioritize the credibility of the film instead of your position. So for example, people are not going to care that you're an executive producer on your own small horror web series, and they would be a bit happier if they saw that you were a PA on let's say, the Avengers secondly skills Data is all about what you can do for them, not for you. So ask yourself, what can you do that is useful for the production. Emphasize quality over quantity, but if possible, pay attention to both. You want to make sure that you are both doing great work and have many of those great works in the works.
Hollywood wants to know that you are still relevant and active in the industry. And there's nothing that shows it clearly than someone who is consistently getting good projects and in huge quantities.