Return to Virginia Business - November 2001

Filmmaking 101

Screenwriter/producer Kevin Hershberger didn't go to film school or writing classes to prepare for his venture into filmmaking. Rather, the 27-year-old Virginia Military Institute grad watched a lot of movies.

Hershberger says he watched movies all the time to get ideas on directing and producing. He also watched documentaries on the making of movies. "You have to do it yourself. You can't go to film school and expect to know how to make movies," he says.

Hershberger got his start in the business when he was a VMI cadet. Showtime Channel was filming the movie "Assault at West Point" at the institute, and Hershberger helped coordinate extras on the set. Working with the film's director helped him understand the film-making process.

"If you want to break into the business, you have to write your own stuff," Hershberger says. After all, he says, you can't call up a major studio and say: "I'd like to direct. Do you have a script for me?" You have to prove yourself first. The best way to do that is to develop your own material from scratch.

Hershberger's strategy paid off. In 1999, he and two partners started their own production company, LionHeart FilmWorks. Although Hershberger's written at least 10 scripts, so far he's only made two into films. He has just finished production on "Wicked Spring," a Civil War drama that LionHeart FilmWorks made for less than $1 million. The young filmmaker is now seeking a major company to distribute the film. His first feature film, "The Nest," was broadcast over the Internet. Private investors funded both movies.

- Leila Marija Ugincius

Return to Virginia Business - November 2001