Things in Australia may be different to America re people wanting/using colector cars, 300s, but so far other members have offered sound advice re what I have experienced. Rule 1 - if you or your representative cannot go/be with the car, do not supply it if it is a rare car. Rule 2 - mainly if the car is to be driven, or have actors filmed in close in the car - ask who you will be dealing with re what they want to do with the car - usually the Director has all the say - if you cannot work/reason/compromise with him, do not supply the car. Ask whomever contacted you how is the Director regarded by industry workers/peers. Rule 3, and they nearly always will conceal what they really want if your car is to be a 'hero' (main) vehicle - ask for copies/pages of script that your car is involved in/featured in - this will tell/show you what is likely, and who will be driving/around your car. You won't get copies/pages, but at least they should describe scenes/action/etc.. Rule 4 - ask will they want to mount any cameras, remove bootlid, other parts/panels, to fit gear or camera operators/Director, etc in your car - or will they want to solid tow or tralier your car while filming? Rule 5 - find out the rate, and ask a fair price, insist the car be insured - if they won't pay or insure, then it is a fair guess they will be hard to deal with, and may not care if your car is knocked around. As an explanation to all the above - The first key point, as said by others, is they want finished film in the can - your car likely is indeed tenth or fortyith priority. Next if the car is to be driven, beware who drives it. Best case is a prefessional driver, maybe even a defined stunt driver. He likely will be safer than a young actor who never mind he has to stop the car within a few inches of some dictated mark, jump out with the car hopefully in park, then deliver some lines he may have just been given seconds before after some major rewrite!?? And all this before the Director may be a total jerk, not give a stuff about the actors, crew, or props. What is my experince to offer this advice? 1) As bad as it may get?? I provided a 60 Caddy Eldo for the hero car on a 60s country boy robs a local bank after it won't lend him money for his farm, and then flees in it after kidnapping the local female schoolteacher because the local cops sees him do it, and knows him. What a nightmare four weeks over two moths I spent - the actors were young, smoked pot between filming, the guy driver didn't drive cars daily because they made him nervous, most of the filming was high country roads cut into side of up to 300 foot sheer drops - all dirt roads cut into gum bush, a small old wooden punt used to carry car over a river, and it was in over 100 degree summer total fire ban days. Most of the crew loved my car, which pissed off the Director, who wrote new secenes where rifles were thrown into and at actors in the car. When I said 'enough', (after the scared driver jumped out of car half way up a hill and left it and two actors in it to roll backwards over a sheer drop, it only saved by me jumping out of filming other car and running to it), I was going to pull the car, he grabbed an axe and headed for the car, only to be stopped by some of the crew. Filming was suspended for rest of day, and he caught a plane out, and filming was then totally suspended while the foreign Cable Company funding the film appoinited the female lead the new Director. My car was thereafter only used after we agreed the scenes/use. 2) not quite so bad - a nightclub I went to often wanted cars for a Parade - lots of pretty scanty clad girls in three of my convertibles, but hi heels, cigarettes, and show off young guys jumping over the sides!!! 3) Better - a national Coca Cola Commercial - 58 Cad convertible, night only shooting, with only an absolute knockout figure/face and personality early 20s blonde and her beau in the car - both great to work with and the Director etc great - only two locations - parked at a Drive Inn, and coming out of a multi story car park 4) really good - an Olivia Newton John (a la the Movie "Grease") production, in which she saw mne/my red 62 XKE Roadster drive past her while shopping and she asked that they find who owned it and feature it in her film/project. When it cost them $1000 to insure it for one night, they let me drive it, and it was only in one scene that took about 3 takes and only 30 minutes to film. And she was OK/happy with that (so was I). You all decide - if you are lucky you may get good/reasonable money, meet great people to work with, and leave with the experience of having done it. If you are unlucky, they will lie about what they really intend to do with the car because they know you will never let them do it. The Director may also be a bastard, who hates his actors and especially you and your car. They may/will want to mount double alloy camera bars across your hood, pulled down so hard the multi thousand dollar cameras will not be lost. And finally the actor may not be able to drive - in another movie I crouched down on the front floor telling the guy how to drive, as the Director would not give time for him to do a couple of minutes familarization. When in the car I found out why - he had no licence - as we waited for Director to call "Action" he told me how nervous he was, because he had rolled and written off the only car he had ever driven before, it some famous female American actor's Cadillac, it either in middle of Hollywood, or Palm Springs!! Do not get sucked in by thinking your car may be worth more because it was in a film - surprising how so many never ever realise/know your car was in it/movie. Good luck, hope this helps, maybe many of you over there don't have "sucker' written on your foreheads like I often do/have. Surely any 300 does not need unwanted dints or damage, so do your homework first? all the best from Oz, Christopher To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm Yahoo! 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