I understand this is a whole specialty so you probably need to find
those who do this and get the complete scoop from them.
Keep your copyright, get paid something up front, make certain you
and they agree on what you're doing there and what it's going to be
for, how it's going to be used, register each day's work, mark all
the prints you pass out with your complete contact and copyright info
and mark them clearly for their intended usage - "complimentary copy,
for personal use only" or "for portfolio use only, not for
reproduction".
You just never know, even with those film festival type movies, where
someone in them might end up. When they end up there you've got the
early stuff from their career and it can be worth a lot.
--
Emily L. Ferguson
elf@cape.com 508-563-6822
New England landscapes, wooden boats and races, press photography
Beetle cats on the web at:
http://www.vsu.cape.com/~elf
http://www.beetlecat.org/store.html#yrbook