Q3 Wed*esday,0March0 0 0 0 FILM TAX From Page 5B "Right now our job is to educate (legislators), to let them know, 'look how this is benefiting the state, look what it's creating, look what we're doing,' " Rubin said. "Look at Danny and I, two kids who started a production compa- ny and have helped pump millions of dollars into the local economy." But it was never just about the money. For Sardarov, the impact of the incentives was shown through the revitalization of Detroit, which has seen a grass- roots Renaissance through the city's youth. "The government keeps talking about numbers and numbers, but you can't base society off num- bers," he said. "It's about the spirit that kind of injects into the soci- ety - there's this hope, and hope is intrinsic. You can't buy hope with numbers, you can't buy hope with tax incentives." He went on to tell the story of shooting a scene in "The Ides of March" on abus full of extras. "We get off the bus, and I think it was George Clooney himself that said, 'I have never seen this much passion coming from extras - they're going at it, they're doing everything we tell them to do, you could just see it in their eyes,' " Sardarov narrated. "People in Detroit have never had these opportunities before, suddenly they're coming in tenfold." "This is something where peo- ple can go to the movie theater, and they can see their city, their state immortalized up on the screen," Mooney said. "It's Robo- cop, it's Detroit, it's Grand Rapids, it's the gorgeous U.P. That's some- thing people get proud about." Burnstien is frustrated by the resurrection of the "brain drain," which had been minimized in recent years because of the film incentive laws. "All those workers that have been trained, all those young people we've trained, they've got a skill, and they're going to go where the action is," he said. "That means we're going to lose them to states like Louisiana, Ohio and Georgia ... and they'll go to California." Michigan filmmakers appear to have the support of the citizens. At a town hall meeting in Livonia, Mich. last month that featured author and Detroit Free Press columnist Mitch Albom, actor Jeff Daniels, Burnstein and oth- ers speaking against the proposal, about 4,000 people showed up when the organizers only expect- ed an audience of 500. Despite their activism, many in the industry are facing the real- ity that their careers as Michi- gan filmmakers are potentially defunct. "I gave my landlord my two months notice that I'm moving out," Zakalik said. "And I'm going to figure out what I'm going to do. I thought about moving to North Carolina, which has a pretty good business there ... I don't know ... It's like, what was the point? Why did we stay if we're just going to be told we can't get a job tomor- row?" Saradov said he was planning on staying in Michigan until "the well ran dry." "If this passes, I'm going to be going to New York or L.A., unfor- tunately," Saradov said. "I got on a good roll, and I want to keep going. If things were sticking around here, I'd definitely be here no question about it." LSA senior Tian-Jun Gu was planning to stay around Michi- gan after graduation and work with friends to write and produce viral videos in the vein of "Funny or Die" - hiring Michigan actors and crews, of course. But after the proposal, his plans might change. "The problem with (Snyder) even proposing it is the fact that it scared businesses off," he said. "Now studios are going to be look- ing at Michigan to see if we can be trusted. "These film incentives, even if they are kept, are always going to be in danger of being cut. It's looking more and more like L.A. is going to be a possibility for me because of that inherent danger, even if the film incentives are kept." Still, in the midst of all the uncertainty, Burnstein sees no reason to give up hope. "Do I think we have a reason- able shot saving this thing? I do, or I wouldn't be doing it," Burn- stein said. "Do I think it's a slam dunk? Of course not. You know, if we lose, I want to walk away and be able to tell my students 'I did everything I could to try and save this opportunity for you.' If we fail, we fail, but I'd be damned if I'm not going to try." University students, enjoy the celebrity sightings while you still can - they may be soon gone for good. But more importantly, because of the Governor's pro- posal, our school's budding actors and filmmakers may be gone for good too.