Bulletproof Screenwriting™ Podcast
The Bulletproof Screenwriting Podcast shows you how to make your screenplays bulletproof. Weekly interviews with Oscar® and Emmy® award winning screenwriters, story specialists, best-selling authors, Hollywood agents and managers, and industry insiders...
Podcaster
Episoden
04.09.2025
1 Stunde 1 Minute
Evan Kidd is a passionate indie filmmaker who believes great
stories don’t need big budgets—just big heart. In this episode, he
shares how he created his feature film Son of Clowns using the
resources he already had: friends, favors, and faith in the
process. With a deep respect for collaboration, Evan emphasizes the
importance of building a reliable team, staying grounded, and
keeping ego out of the equation. His filmmaking philosophy leans
heavily on authenticity, transparency, and making the most of
real-world environments, often embracing the beautiful chaos that
unfolds on set. Throughout the conversation, Evan offers wisdom for
creatives struggling with fear and perfectionism. He encourages
filmmakers to stop waiting for ideal circumstances and start where
they are, even if that means running sound themselves or rewriting
scenes to fit accessible locations. “Filmmaking is just a big game
of improvisation,” he says, reminding us that adaptability and
passion are more powerful than money. His journey is a heartfelt
lesson in making art that matters—without asking permission.
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28.08.2025
52 Minuten
Brit Cruise—educator, filmmaker, and producer of Pixar in a
Box—takes us on a journey through the fusion of storytelling,
science, and education. From his early days editing videos with
dual VCRs to his innovative work at Khan Academy, Brit reveals how
deep focus, analog creativity, and a love for explanation helped
shape his approach to teaching complex subjects through immersive
visuals. With storytelling as the core, he shares how each lesson
in Pixar in a Box connects school-taught concepts like math and
physics to the movie magic of Pixar, showing students that what
they learn can have real, creative application. Throughout the
conversation, Brit explores his philosophy that creativity is “the
ability to deal with unknowns,” emphasizing iteration, structure,
and the power of simplicity. He also gives us a glimpse into the
upcoming storytelling curriculum at Pixar in a Box, where students
will storyboard their own shorts from scratch. For filmmakers,
educators, and curious minds alike, this episode is a masterclass
in how to bring clarity, authenticity, and joy into the learning
and creative process.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
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21.08.2025
1 Stunde 12 Minuten
Gary King is a filmmaker who transitioned from a career in
psychology and human resources to independent cinema, building a
body of work that balances heart, hustle, and deeply human
storytelling.In the spirit of Taoist unpredictability, Gary’s story
unfolds not as a straight line, but as a rich weave of intuition,
risk, and creative alignment. He didn’t attend film school—not out
of rebellion, but because he didn’t know it existed as a real path.
Yet, what he lacked in formal education, he made up for in lived
experience, teaching himself the craft by actually making films.
From his first feature "New York Lately" to a haunting indie gem
titled "Among Us," his journey is a testament to following that
subtle inner pull, even when it defies logic or convention.What
stood out most was Gary's devotion to character.
He didn’t chase Hollywood formulas or pre-packaged three-act
structures. Instead, he sculpted stories that breathe. Stories that
fail and rise again. He spoke of actors, not as tools to carry his
vision, but as living beings whose rhythms dictate the energy of a
scene. “The first take might be gold for one actor, but the sixth
take is where another actor finds their truth,” he said. That kind
of awareness doesn’t come from reading screenwriting manuals. It
comes from presence.It’s no surprise that Gary gravitated toward
stories with strong female leads. His commitment to representation
isn't a gimmick—it’s a reflection of his own lived dynamics. He and
his wife uprooted their lives together, and it was her faith in him
that seeded the beginning of his filmmaking path. When he pitched
the idea of becoming a director, her response wasn’t fear—it was,
“Okay, how do we make this happen?”Every film Gary makes becomes
his personal film school. No gatekeeping. No pedigree. Just the
camera, the actor, the breath of a moment, and the sacred chaos of
the edit room.
One of the most beautiful sentiments he shared was how universal
pain is the bridge to empathy. “You can tell a story about a
Broadway dancer who never makes it, and someone who’s never danced
a day in their life will see themselves in that struggle.”And while
his films may not be backed by million-dollar budgets or
high-concept gimmicks, they pulse with something far rarer:
authenticity. A humility that says, “I’m still learning.” A clarity
that says, “This is who I am.” And perhaps most importantly, a
humor that says, “Yes, I returned a porno tape to Blockbuster by
accident, and no, I don’t regret it.”
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Mehr
14.08.2025
57 Minuten
When two Daves walk into a podcast, you don’t expect to stumble
upon a meditation on art, failure, persistence, and horror-comedy.
But that’s exactly what happened in this electric and delightfully
unfiltered conversation with Dave Campfield, a filmmaker, actor,
and host of the Troma Now Podcast, best known for his work in the
cult Caesar and Otto comedy-horror film series.Dave Campfield is a
fiercely independent filmmaker whose journey from a now-defunct
film college in New Mexico to directing his own cult horror satires
has been a long and winding road paved with hustle, humor, and
horror.We start in the sand-colored surrealism of Santa Fe, where
adobe buildings and the ghost of City Slickers set the stage for
Dave’s early filmmaking dreams. In the land of tumbleweeds and
tumble-down gym studios turned sound stages, Dave cut his teeth not
just on film but on the art of adaptation.
The college no longer exists, but the memories—like chalk lines
under studio lights—remain vivid in his story. “It was like going
to school on Tatooine,” he says, laughing, but behind that joke is
a bittersweet nod to the ephemeral.From there, Dave walks us
through the illusion of success—early meetings with Universal and
New Line Cinema where hopes were dangled like carrots in front of
eager young dreamers. The industry, he quickly learned, speaks its
own coded language: familiarity, marketability, and sometimes,
plain deception. One mentor told him to “say you're young, from the
streets, and have a dark comedy,” regardless of truth. Dave gave it
a shot but came away with the haunting realization that "they were
intrigued enough to keep me on leash, but not enough to make it
happen."That experience seeded his first real film, “Dark Chamber,”
a mystery-horror project which deliberately bucked slasher
formulas. It took five years to make—five years of blood, sweat,
and overdrafts. And yet, when the studios responded with, “We
wanted something more familiar,” Dave knew he was swimming
upstream. Still, he sold the film to a small distributor, endured
its repackaging as something it wasn’t, and got it onto Netflix. A
win—just not the one he envisioned.
But here’s the heart of it all: Dave didn’t stop. He pivoted, not
with bitterness, but with evolution. “I decided I wasn't going to
be one of those people waiting for opportunity. You had to make it
happen on your own.” And so, he leaned into comedy horror—a genre
he describes as “Abbott and Costello meet Frankenstein, but for the
splatter generation.” Thus, Caesar and Otto were born: two absurdly
lovable doofuses bumbling their way through massacres, monsters,
and paranormal mayhem.One of Dave’s secret weapons is loyalty to
what’s real. Whether recounting how Lloyd Kaufman forgot him (then
remembered) or editing commercials for the Philadelphia Pet Expo,
he keeps a kind of grounded magic about his craft. He shares a
deeply personal new project, “Awaken the Reaper,” born from a
decade of introspection and struggle, calling it “the most personal
thing I’ve ever written.” He says, “It’s about being stuck—feeling
like every day you’re not moving forward—and finally getting out of
your own way.”All along, Dave’s been quietly building a reputation
for casting future stars before they break—Trey Byers (Empire),
Peter Scanavino (Law & Order)—and hosting a podcast that
thrives not just because of brand synergy with Troma, but because
he genuinely knows how to talk to people. “They’ve never rejected
an episode,” he remarks. “I tease Troma a lot, and they’re always
game. It’s a beautiful collaboration.”The conversation wraps not
with grandiosity, but a recognition that even the smallest cult
followings can keep a creator going. “My fanbase is small, but
intense,” Dave says with pride. “I can rattle them off on two
hands.” Maybe that’s enough. Maybe that’s everything.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
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Mehr
07.08.2025
38 Minuten
In this episode, screenwriter and filmmaker S.S. Wilson shares the
behind-the-scenes journey of creating the cult classic Tremors,
revealing how creative limitations, meticulous story structure, and
a deep respect for character and sound design brought the film to
life. From his writing process with partner Brent Maddock to the
evolution of the Tremors franchise and his advice for aspiring
filmmakers, Wilson offers a masterclass in crafting compelling,
low-budget cinema with heart and precision.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/bulletproof-screenwriting-podcast--2881148/support.
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Über diesen Podcast
The Bulletproof Screenwriting Podcast shows you how to make your
screenplays bulletproof. Weekly interviews with Oscar® and Emmy®
award winning screenwriters, story specialists, best-selling
authors, Hollywood agents and managers, and industry insiders. We
cover every aspect of the screenwriting process. This is the
screenwriting podcast for the rest of us. No fluff. No BS. Just
straight talk that will help you on your screenwriting
journey.
Some of the past guests include 3X Oscar® Winning Writer/Director
Oliver Stone, Eric Roth (Dune, Forest Gump), Edgar Wright (Shaun of
the Dead), Richard Linklater (Boyhood, Slacker) James V. Hart
(Dracula, Hook), John August (Big Fish, Aladdin), Jim Uhls ( Fight
Club), Peter Rader (Waterworld), Diane Drake (What Women Want),
Daniel Knauf (Carnival, Blacklist), Derek Kolstad (John Wick) and
Pen Densham (Robin Hood, Backdraft) to name a few.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/bulletproof-screenwriting-podcast--2881148/support.
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