AFM: Selling Your Independent Film

Master the American Film Market: understand how sales agents operate, what buyers are looking for, and how to maximize your film's market potential.

What Is the American Film Market?

The American Film Market (AFM) is held every November in Santa Monica, California, and is the world's largest market dedicated to independent film distribution. Unlike film festivals, which celebrate artistic achievement, AFM is purely a business event. Producers, directors, distributors, and sales agents gather to buy and sell films, negotiate international rights, forge partnerships, and build relationships that power the independent film industry.

Over 500 films are bought and sold at AFM annually, representing billions of dollars in deals. If your film is positioned for acquisition by a distributor, AFM is likely where that deal will happen—or where the relationships that lead to a deal will begin.

The Role of Sales Agents at AFM

What Sales Agents Do

A film sales agent is a business manager and salespeople for your film. They take your completed film to AFM, screen it for potential buyers (distributors, production companies, streaming platforms), negotiate terms, and close deals. They handle contracts, manage territories (i.e., North America, Europe, Asia), and coordinate with your legal and financial advisors. In exchange, they typically take 10–20% commission of the distribution deal's total value.

Unlike distributors (who market and release your film), sales agents are middlemen who broker the relationship between producers and distributors. They don't market your film directly to consumers; they market it to professional buyers.

What Sales Agents Bring to AFM

AFM Preparation: What You Need Before You Go

Your Film Must Be Complete

AFM is not a place to sell an unfinished film. Your film should be color-graded, mixed, and locked. You should have a finished answer print or digital cinema package (DCP) ready for screening. If your film is still in post-production, wait until you have it fully finished before approaching a sales agent.

Material Requirements for Sales Agents

When you engage a sales agent, they'll request:

How AFM Deals Work: The Buyer Dynamics

Who Buys at AFM

AFM buyers fall into several categories:

The Screening and Pitch Process

At AFM, your sales agent schedules screening times and pitch meetings. A typical AFM strategy looks like this:

  1. Strategic opening screenings (Day 1–2): A major buyer or two screens first, setting the tone. If they love it and express interest, word-of-mouth spreads quickly through the AFM buyer community.
  2. Build momentum (Day 3–5): Multiple screenings per day to different buyers. Your agent tracks feedback, adjusts the pitch based on buyer reception, and highlights competitive interest.
  3. Negotiate (Day 6–9): Serious buyers make offers. Your agent negotiates terms, leverages competing offers, and positions your film for the best deal.
  4. Close (By Day 10): Deal closes, contracts signed, and your agent begins coordinating delivery with the buyer.

Market Timing and Competitive Advantage

Buyers at AFM are looking for specific things: a completed film with a clear genre identity, marketable cast or director, and a clean legal chain of title. If your film checks these boxes and addresses a gap in the buyer's current slate, it will sell. If it doesn't, it won't—no amount of pitching changes that calculus.

AFM happens once a year. If your film doesn't sell at AFM, you can re-pitch at Cannes Marché du Film (May), or try other festivals and markets. But AFM is the largest opportunity in the US independent film calendar.

Finding a Good Sales Agent

Not all sales agents are created equal. A reputable agent has:
- Established relationships with major distributors
- A track record of deals closed at recent AFM events
- Clear communication and transparency about fees and strategy
- Honest feedback about your film's market position (some agents will tell you your film isn't AFM-ready and recommend festival strategy instead)

Carbon Arc Media connects independent producers with established sales agents who have active AFM relationships and deep distribution expertise. We can help you evaluate agent proposals and understand deal terms.

Deal Structures and Terms

Key Deal Elements

When a buyer makes an offer, the deal includes:

What's a "Good" Deal?

Deal quality depends on multiple factors: advance amount, revenue share percentages, territory scope, and the buyer's marketing commitment. A distributor with theatrical reach and a $50,000 advance is worth more than a streaming-only distributor with no advance. Your sales agent will advise on what's market for your genre and film profile.

After AFM: Delivery and Release

Once a deal closes, delivery begins. You'll have 8–12 weeks to deliver all materials (video masters, audio, metadata, subtitles, chain of title) to the distributor. This is where complete legal delivery management becomes critical. Missing delivery deadlines or submitting non-compliant materials can delay release, cost marketing spend, and damage your relationship with the distributor.

Carbon Arc Media manages post-sale delivery logistics, ensuring your film meets every technical and legal requirement, on time.

Related Resources

About the Author

Dale Tanguay is a Post-Production Supervisor and film legal delivery expert. Owner of Carbon Arc Media, he works with producers and sales agents to navigate the post-acquisition delivery process following AFM and other market sales. He connects producers with sales agents who have active AFM relationships and understands the market dynamics that drive independent film acquisition. Based in Universal City, CA. Contact Dale to discuss your AFM strategy or post-sale delivery needs.