Film Trooper Podcast with Scott McMahon: A Filmmaking Podcast
Welcome to Film Trooper, where we empower the filmmaking entrepreneur. Why? Because film production is no longer a barrier—anyone can make a film. Film distribution is no longer a barrier—anyone can sell their film directly to the world. Film...
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Episoden
02.06.2021
9 Minuten
After working in the IFH labs for the first part of 2021 I can
finally announce what it is. May I introduce Indie Film Hustle's
FILMMAKER PROCESS.
Filmmaker Process offers comprehensive professional services for
hire to help filmmakers and screenwriters, working at any budget
level, get their film project to the finish line. I wanted to put
the much needed services filmmaker need but rarely have access to
all under one roof.
Filmmakers and screenwriters usually could only get access to these
services if they "knew someone." Here are the services and products
Filmmaker Process gives you access to:
- Pitch Decks
- Budget and Scheduling
- Domestic and International Sales Estimates
- Legal Contracts and Form Templates
- Indie Film Investor Package
- Consulting and Coaching
- Script Coverage
- Post Production Services
- Trailer Editing
- Poster, VOD and DVD/Blu-Ray Artwork
- Film Deliverables (Both Physical and Legal)
- Production Payroll
In this episode I go over what each service is and how you can use
it to get your film project to the finish line.
For more info go to: www.filmmakerprocess.com
Mehr
20.04.2021
2 Stunden 7 Minuten
Well I put out an episode back in 2019 putting my dream list of
guests out into the universe and in the past four months I've been
humbled to have some amazing filmmakers and screenwriters on the
show. Incredibly one of those dream guests has made his way on the
show today.
We are joined by indie film icon and Oscar nominated
writer/director Richard Linklater. Richard was one of the
filmmakers who helped to launch the independent film movement that
we know today with his classic 1991 indie film Slacker. So
today, we will not only dive into the extraordinary career of
Richard Linklater but also that of collaborator and longtime friend
writer/director Katie Cokinos.
If this is your introduction to Linklater and his work, here are a
few highlights you must know; Linklater helped launch the 90s indie
film renaissance with his film Slacker.
The producer, director has juggled the TV, film, short-film, and
documentary genres seamlessly over his career - typically focusing
in fine detail on generational rites and mores with rare compassion
and understanding while definitively capturing the 20-something
culture of his era through a series of nuanced, illuminating
ensemble pieces which introduced any number of talented young
actors into the Hollywood eco-system.
One of the talents to emerge from this era is the Texas native,
Matthew McConaughey in Linklater’s third movie and VHS smash hit,
Dazed and Confused. Based on Linklater’s years at Huntsville High
School and the people he encountered there, the film shadows the
adventures of high school and junior high students on the last day
of school in May 1976.
Throughout his career Richard has chosen to tell stories about the
human condition, while many times making us laugh and cry at the
same time. I found an immense philosophical under current to most
of his life's work. From The Before Trilogy to Boyhood, his
films tackle topics in an honest, raw and deeper way that is not
normally seen in filmmaking.
Many of the actors who work with Richard call him the "Zen
Director" on set. His philosophy can be felt throughout his
work. He often tells long and transformative coming of age
stories over years, if not decades, something that is unique to
him.
His Oscar nominated film Boyhood is a groundbreaking story of
growing up as seen through the eyes of a child named Mason (a
breakthrough performance by Ellar Coltrane), who literally grows up
on screen before our eyes. Starring Ethan Hawke and Patricia
Arquette as Mason's parents and newcomer Lorelei Linklater as his
sister Samantha, BOYHOOD charts the rocky terrain of childhood like
no other film has before.
Snapshots of adolescence from road trips and family dinners to
birthdays and graduations and all the moments in between become
transcendent, set to a soundtrack spanning the years from
Coldplay's Yellow to Arcade Fire's Deep Blue. BOYHOOD is both a
nostalgic time capsule of the recent past and an ode to growing up
and parenting. It's impossible to watch Mason and his family
without thinking about our own journey.
Now the other remarkable filmmaker in this conversation is Katie
Cokinos. She has made over ten short films and in 2000 wrote,
directed, and acted in the feature film, Portrait of a Girl as a
Young Catwhich premiered at SXSW. Katie produced Eagle
Pennell’s film, Heart Full of Soul (1990); was a publicist for
Richard Linklater’s Slacker, (1990). She was the Managing
Director of the Austin Film Society, 1990-95.
Her latest film is the coming of age story I Dream Too Much,
co-produced by Richard. Here's a bit about the film:
Presents a day in the life in Austin, Texas among its social
outcasts and misfits, predominantly the twenty-something set, using
a series of linear vignettes. These characters, who in some manner
just don't fit into the establishment norms, move seamlessly from
one scene to the next, randomly coming and going into one another's
lives. Highlights include a UFO buff who adamantly insists that the
U.S. has been on the moon since the 1950s, a woman who produces a
glass slide purportedly of Madonna's pap smear, and an old
anarchist who sympathetically shares his philosophy of life with a
robber.
So much was covered in this EPIC 2 hours conversation. I need to
stop here and let you dive in.
Enjoy my conversation with Richard Linklater and Katie
Cokinos.
Mehr
07.04.2021
1 Stunde 44 Minuten
We have made it to 450 episodes of the Indie Film Hustle Podcast.
The IFH Tribe has given me 450 opportunities to serve them and for
that I am humbled. Thank you all for allowing me to do what I love
to do so much. With that said I wanted to bring you a massive guest
for this remarkable milestone. Today’s guest is a writer, director,
producer, actor and indie filmmaking legend Edward Burns.
Many of you might have heard of the Sundance Film Festival winning
film called The Brothers McMullen, his iconic first film that tells
the story of three Irish Catholic brothers from Long Island who
struggle to deal with love, marriage, and infidelity. His
cinderella story of making the film, getting into Sundance and
launching his career is the stuff of legend.
The Brothers McMullen was sold to Fox Searchlight and went on to
make over $10 million at the box office on a $27,000 budget, making
it one of the most successful indie films of the decade.
Ed went off to star in huge films like Saving Private Ryan for
Steven Spielberg and direct studio films like the box office hit
She’s The One. The films about the love lives of two brothers,
Mickey and Francis, interconnect as Francis cheats on his wife with
Mickey’s ex-girlfriend, while Mickey impulsively marries a
stranger.
Even after his mainstream success as an actor, writer and director
he still never forgot his indie roots. He continued to quietly
produce completely independent feature films on really low budgets.
How low, how about $9000. As with any smart filmmaker, Ed has
continued to not only produce films but to consider new methods of
getting his projects to the world.
In 2007, he teamed up with Apple iTunes to release an exclusive
film Purple Violets. It was a sign of the times that the director
was branching out to new methods of release for his projects.
In addition, he also continued to release works with his signature
tried-and-true method of filmmaking. Using a very small $25,000
budget and a lot of resourcefulness, Burns created Nice Guy Johnny
in 2010.
Johnny Rizzo is about to trade his dream job in talk radio for some
snooze-ville gig that’ll pay enough to please his fiancée. Enter
Uncle Terry, a rascally womanizer set on turning a weekend in the
Hamptons into an eye-opening fling for his nephew. Nice Guy
Johnny’s not interested, of course, but then he meets the lovely
Brooke, who challenges Johnny to make the toughest decision of his
life.
The film debuted at the Tribeca Film Festival. While he was
releasing that film, Burns wrote, starred and directed Newlyweds.
He filmed this on a small Canon 5D camera in only 12 days and on a
budget of only $9,000.
Newlyweds Buzzy and Katie find their blissful life disrupted by the
arrival of his half-sister and news of her sister’s marriage
troubles.
In his book, Independent Ed: Inside a Career of Big Dreams, Little
Movies, and the Twelve Best Days of My Life (which I recommend ALL
filmmakers read), Ed mentions some rules he dubbed “McMullen 2.0”
which were basically a set of rules for independent filmmakers to
shoot by.
Actors would have to work for virtually nothing.
The film should take no longer than 12 days to film and get into
the can
Don’t shoot with any more than a three-man crew
Actor’s use their own clothes
Actors do their own hair and make-up
Ask and beg for any locations
Use the resources you have at your disposal
I used similar rules when I shot my feature films This is Meg,
which I shot that in 8 days and On the Corner of Ego and Desire
which I shot in 4 days. To be honest Ed was one of my main
inspirations when I decided to make my first micro-budget feature
film, along with Mark and Jay Duplass, Joe Swanberg and Michael and
Mark Polish.
Ed has continued to have an amazing career directing films like The
Fitzgerald Family Christmas, The Groomsmen, Looking for Kitty, Ash
Wednesday, Sidewalks of New York, No Looking Back and many
more.
Ed jumped into television with the Spielberg produced TNT drama
Public Morals, where he wrote, directed and starred in every
episode.
Set in the early 1960s in New York City’s Public Morals Division,
where cops walk the line between morality and criminality as the
temptations that come from dealing with all kinds of vice can get
the better of them.
His latest project is EPIX’s Bridge and Tunnel is a dramedy series
set in 1980 that revolves around a group of recent college grads
setting out to pursue their dreams in Manhattan while still
clinging to the familiarity of their working-class Long Island
hometown. He also pulls writing, producing and directing duties for
all the episodes.
Ed has continued to give back to the indie film community with his
amazing book, lectures and his knowledge bomb packed director
commentaries. Trust me go out and buy the DVD versions of all his
films. His commentaries are worth the price of admission.
When I first spoke to Ed he told that he had been a fan of the
podcast for a while. As you can imagine I was floored and humbled
at the same time. Getting to sit-down and speak to a filmmaker that
had such an impact my own directing career was a dream come true.
Ed is an inspiration to so many indie filmmakers around the world
and I’m honored to bring this epic conversation to the tribe.
Enjoy my conversation with Edward Burns.
Mehr
28.12.2020
57 Minuten
Today on the show I bring you one of the most influential and
iconic filmmakers in the history of cinema, three-time Oscar winner
Oliver Stone. Throughout his legendary career, Oliver Stone has
served as director, writer, and producer on a variety of films,
documentaries, and television movies. His films have been nominated
for forthy two Oscars and have won twelve.
I hope this conversation inspires filmmakers and screenwriters to
never give up. Oliver struggled for years taking jobs as a
production assistant, cab driver, office assistant, and any other
gig he could find to help him survive while he was chasing his
dream. He wrote and wrote, meeting his goal of one to two
screenplays a year, no matter what. Never give up, never
surrender.
Enjoy my epic conversation with Oliver Stone.
Mehr
27.10.2020
35 Minuten
Alex Ferrari has been thinking about doing this podcast for a long
time. In the tradition of Why Filmmakers are Always So Damn Broke
& What They Can Do to Change It this episode is going to be a
cold bucket of water over your head if you are not ready for it. In
the insane world we are all living in today, filmmakers need to
break out of the mindset that we are living in the golden age of
indie cinema.
The rules have changed dramatically since the 90s and even more so
in the last 8 months of the COVID pandemic. The rules aren't the
only thing that has changed but the game has as well. The film
distribution infrastructure is broken and has been broken for many
decades. It is not set up to help filmmakers make money. It is
purely designed to put more money into the pockets of film
distributors.
I have written extensively about this in my book Rise of the
Filmtrepreneur: How to Turn Your Indie Film into a Moneymaking
Business. I want to put together one of my hard truths episodes to
help filmmakers better understand the indie film marketplace and
how to best position themselves to actually make money.
There is so much talk about new cameras, lenses, rigs,
post-production software, and other more interesting aspects of the
filmmaking process but when it comes to selling and making money
with movies filmmakers rely on old information that is no longer
relevant in the current marketplace. I hope this episode empowers
you to not only make more movies but to also make money while doing
it.
Strap yourself in because for some of you it will be a rough
episode to listen to. Be well, stay safe, and keep that hustle
going.
Mehr
Über diesen Podcast
Welcome to Film Trooper, where we empower the filmmaking
entrepreneur. Why? Because film production is no longer a
barrier—anyone can make a film. Film distribution is no longer a
barrier—anyone can sell their film directly to the world.
Film sales and marketing are the last barriers! To rise
above the noise of the internet is the challenge — this is the
place that explores these topics to help you, the filmmaking
entrepreneur.
Proud Member of the IFH Podcast Network (www.ifhpodcastnetwork.com)
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