Associate producer - performs limited producing functions under the authority of a producer; often in charge of the day-to-day running of a production
Coordinating producer - coordinates the work of two or more producers working separately on one or more productions
Co-producer - typically performs producing functions in tandem with one or more other co-producers (working as a team, rather than separately on different aspects of the production)
Executive producer - supervises one or more producers in all aspects of their work; sometimes the initiator of the production; usually the ultimate authority on the creative and business aspects of the production (except to the extent that a film director retains creative control)
Line producer - supervises the physical and aspects of the production (not the creative aspects), including personnel, technology, budget and scheduling considerations — see also unit production manager
Segment producer - produces one or more constituent parts of a multipart production (e.g., a television newsmagazine program)
Supervising producer - supervises one or more producers in some or all aspects of their work; usually works under the authority of an executive producer
In economics, a producer is an individual or organization that creates goods or services.
A producer is also a slang term in Britain. It comes from the word produce. It refers to a requirement by the police for the driver of a car to present documents at a police station. The form issued is a HO/RT1. Under the Road Traffic Act (1988) it is an offence to drive without certain documents, but the documents do not need to be available for immediate inspection. They can be kept safely at home or anywhere else. The required documents — driving licence, insurance certificate and MOT certificate — must be produced at a police station within seven days. The driver chooses the police station. Failure to produce the documents in a timely manner can result in a fine.
This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. If an article link referred you here, you might want to go back and fix it to point directly to the intended page.
The producer is involved throughout all phases of the filmmaking process from inception to completion of a project.
Changes in movie distribution and marketing in the 1970s and 80s gave rise to the modern-day phenomenon of the Hollywood blockbuster, which tended to bring power back into the hands of the producer.
Producer: the classic producer who typically has the greatest involvement and oversight among a film's various producers.