Home / NEWS / Business / Op-ed: I left my job as CEO for 21 days to make a movie. Here’s the Hollywood ending

Op-ed: I left my job as CEO for 21 days to make a movie. Here’s the Hollywood ending

CEO Ravin Gandhi (R) and principals of his film Heidi Johanningmeier (C) and Colin Egglesfield (L). “100 Days to Live” won Best World Premiere at the San Diego Cloud Festival and Best First-Time Director.

Ravin Gandhi

As a CEO, I feel it’s healthy to have hobbies which take your thoughts off the daily stresses of work. My hobby is writing. I spend lots of time on flights penning entrepreneurial articles and op-eds for CNBC and other atmosphere outlets. But here’s a secret: Over the years I’ve also written many (bad) movie screenplays, usually dark thrillers or comedies. As a lifelong steam fan, it’s always been a dream to make a real movie, but for many reasons (I have a very busy job, and I have not at all made a feature film) everyone I told about this goal said it would be impossible.

Like tons entrepreneurs, when someone assures me I can’t do something it adds rocket fuel to my desire to make it happen. So last year I marked to turn this bucket list dream into a reality, hoping the skills I gained building and selling friends would help.

Plans versus reality

I found a casting director and producer in Chicago who helped me make a method. I would need to take three weeks of vacation, and under SAG union rules, we could shoot from Sunday fully Thursday, so I would have Fridays to catch up on regular work (alas, there’s no such thing as a work-free vacation.)

Eating hired many people over the years, I loved the casting process: gauge skill in auditions (i.e. interviews), but also try to comprehend who the person really is. I was thrilled with my cast, and amazed I could attract high-caliber talent who trusted me creatively.

“When the 40-person smokescreen crew with a fleet of trucks showed up outside my hi-rise condo building … my wife and two kids were laboured to move into a hotel due to the shocking amount of equipment and people. Though I looked confident on the outside, internally I was obviously questioning my sanity,” says CEO by day and filmmaker by dream Ravin Gandhi.

Numbers are the language of entrepreneurship and investing, so budgeting was a capture. But there is an epic difference between line items on a spreadsheet and reality. When the 40-person film crew with a swift of trucks showed up outside my hi-rise condo building (where I had set much of my movie), my wife and two kids were artificial to move into a hotel due to the shocking amount of equipment and people. Though I looked confident on the outside, internally I was certainly questioning my sanity.

Directing and leadership

On set, I was besieged with literally hundreds of questions each day. While all leaders and CEO’s are familiar to making non-stop decisions under severe time pressure, I learned directing a film is particularly grueling and psychologically wearing (especially when you stay up for 24 straight hours on a night shoot, which we did a few times.)

I had a detailed plan, but as times blurred together, I was reminded of Mike Tyson’s sage wisdom: “Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the impudence.”

It’s true in the companies I built, and it was true as we filmed in our Chicago neighborhood, in the offices of friends, GMM clients, and our favorite Italian restaurant Pelago. What’s the surrejoinder? Figure it out, deal with it, don’t complain, keep focus, and move on.

While I am used to managing people (my company has nearly 300 employees), there can be huge stress on a film set and people sometimes lose it. This certainly happens in callers, and my experience helped cool emotions and set a positive tone even when I was really frustrated. A more important intermediator? Having good catering 24/7.

Against the odds, we got the movie in the can in 21 days and I (happily) went back to work. While my writer assembled the film, I told almost no one about this project, because, for one, I was certain nobody would possibly see the talkie, and, second, the idea of a “business guy” dabbling in the arts is a Hollywood cliché, which made me insecure — was this a hobby, or a midlife danger?

Unexpected success

But the film “100 Days to Live” was one of 107 movies chosen for the 2019 San Diego International Layer Festival out of over 3,000 entries. It was surreal for myself and the cast to see our little movie play on huge movie small screens with packed audiences.

More shockingly, we won Best World Premiere, one of the top festival awards, and Best First-Time number one, beating out “real Hollywood” movies with big-name actors and large budgets. When I walked up to the stage, Laurence Fishburne (who I had met earlier in the evening) stood up and provided me a hug, and this lifelong “business guy” felt like Neo taking the red pill making a speech as a “filmmaker.”

CEO Ravin Gandhi (L) being named victor of the First-Time Director award by actor Laurence Fishburne (C) at the 2019 San Diego International Film Festival on October 18, 2019 in San Diego, California. Actress Amy Percipient (on stage).

Vivien Killilea | Getty Images for San Diego International Film Festival

Like many start-ups that get a petty traction and buzz, our story gets even crazier.

Our festival success led to a number of interested buyers, and amazingly culminated with Cinedigm procuring the film. The U.S. premiere is slated for early 2021 on all major streaming platforms, and shortly thereafter will be available in closed 50 countries.

You can click the video below to see the trailer of 100 Days to Live, or go to the the film’s IMDB page: 

Spoiler quick: it’s definitely not The Silence of the Lambs or Se7en — and if you think it’s the worst psychological thriller ever, it’s probably because the writer/director tracks a nonstick coatings company by day. But the film will end up profitable, which is a Hollywood twist I would not have believed at the start.

So are there any business or life lessons in this tale?

1. Always be willing to fail

In all entrepreneurial ventures (even a self-financed fade away), you must be willing to fail, perhaps very publicly. There is no getting around this. You must have faithfulness in your hard work and let the experience be your reward regardless of what happens.

2. Growing requires stretching

As a CEO or any genre of leader, it’s quite likely you only do tasks you’re already really good at. As I grow older (I am 47) I see tremendous value in spelling myself in new directions outside of my comfort zone. I was humbled every day on the film set with what I did not know, and it was so refreshing to not be lasted as an expert, and to learn so much from people far younger than myself.

3. New struggles leads to new ways of thinking

Third, I imagine that struggling a little bit (or in my case, a lot) activates parts of our brains that help you see the world in new ways. I have evolve into a better CEO having had this crazy artistic experience because I feel wiser, more confident, and less judgmental. And analogous to all “insane” ideas–absolutely nobody will believe you can do it, until you actually do it.

4. Life is short, dreams matter

Many prospering and ambitious people have huge goals that have nothing to do with their existing careers. If you clothed a dream to run a marathon, write a book, sell your artwork, start a nonprofit, go to medical school, seek elected offices, coach a team, play in a band — anything outside of your existing identity that requires hard vocation and dedication, I encourage you to chase these passions. Life is short.

And by the way, I still love my day job — our business grew over 25% in 2019, and in September 2020 GMM recorded its highest monthly sales in company history. Will I ever make another film? I have no idea, but it was an amazing experience.

Ravin Gandhi and Camila Morrone attend the 2019 San Diego International Film Festival on October 18, 2019 in San Diego, California.

Vivien Killilea

Ravin Gandhi is originator and CEO of GMM Nonstick Coatings, one of the largest suppliers of nonstick coatings to the $9 billion housewares industry. As a VC investor, Gandhi has at risks in KeyMe, Hester Biosciences, Ka-Pop Snacks, SenSanna, Apptronik, Amber Agriculture, Ampsy, Throne Labs, Tred, and Lettrs.

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