When it came down to looking at the deal, it was insane to me. I’m not crazy concerned about the back-end of it all, having participated in Garden State, which was a huge success and not seeing much meaningful money myself, I know how that goes. You’re not making these sorts of movies to cash in. But I didn’t like some of the other things that were insisted upon me.”

When themovie was first laid out on Kickstarter , it felt so revolutionary and ballsy that plenty of us were fully captivated, watching in awe as the goal was met before the first day of fundraising was even over. That was barely a month ago-- crazy, right?-- but the notion of very famous people Kickstarting their movie has already started to seem common. Which is basically how Zach Braff made $1.5 million in the last day without anyone really talking about it.Braff announced his own Kickstarter project yesterday, a film calledthat he says is similar to his debut feature, and many sections of the Internet went nuts. Hating onhas long been hipster currency, and Braff's Kickstarter seemed to threaten to topple the goodwill around the crowd funding site just a month aftersharply raised its profile. But, as has happened so very many times, the loudest voices on the Internet were not actually the ones that mattered. The Kickstarter page foris just a hair below $1.5 million as I write this, and will probably cross $2 million before the end of the day. That's twice as long as it took, but astonishing all the same.Braff also went to Entertainment Weekly to talk about a few more details behind the project, including more about the Hollywood financing deal he almost set up before walking away:For more on that, you can watch the original video and proposal he posted on Kickstarter (there are celebrity cameos in the video, if that's the kind of thing that persuades you to watch). With his financing goals basically met, Braff seems on track to start production this summer, and his end goal is to be at the Sundance Film Festival next January.