Powered by RND
PodcastsTV & FilmShow Don't Tell: Micro-Budget Filmmaking

Show Don't Tell: Micro-Budget Filmmaking

Noam Kroll
Show Don't Tell: Micro-Budget Filmmaking
Latest episode

Available Episodes

5 of 261
  • Touring With Your Indie Film, Self-Distribution & Building a Sustainable Filmmaking Career With Hudson Phillips
    On today’s episode, I’m joined by filmmaker Hudson Phillips, who returns to share the incredible story of how his first appearance on the podcast led to getting his feature film financed (via one of our listeners)Throughout the discussion we take a deep dive into the realities of making micro-budget features profitable - Touring films like bands, selling merch, building community city-by-city, and designing a sustainable filmmaking life outside the traditional Hollywood pipeline.Topics covered include:How a single podcast interview led directly to a private film investorTouring your film like a band, and why this model worksHow to screen in multiple cities without losing moneyThe merch items that actually sell at indie screening eventsLessons from distribution hell, and why Hudson went DIYSelf-releasing via FilmHub, Bitmax & digital strategy in 2025+Building a real community vs chasing festivalsWhy creative constraints make films better (even at the studio level)“Higher-concept, lower-budget” filmmaking strategyThe future of micro-budget movies & audience buildingLinks from the show:Mirror Box FilmsHudson Phillips - InstagramMirror Box Films - SubstackSign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday
    --------  
    53:17
  • Luke Barnett On Going Viral With A $50 Short & Carving Out Success In Hollywood
    In this episode I’m thrilled to be joined by Luke Barnett to discuss our viral short film OVATION, made for just $50 over a two-hour shoot. The film satirizes the never-ending standing ovations at major festivals that have dominated the trades in recent years.Within days of completion, the short caught fire online and even landed a feature in Variety - proof that the smallest, most spontaneous projects can yield outsized results. Throughout the discussion we unpack OVATION in detail, along with Luke’s wildly successful short The Crossing Over Express, another viral sensation viewed by millions that was transformative for his career.Topics covered include:The origin of Crossing Over Express and building a deeply personal shortShorts that connect vs. features that stall - and why connection beats runtimeWhat “branding yourself” as an artist really means for your careerCrafting OVATION: single take, no dialogue, real applause, two lights, tiny roomSatire vs. parody: the importance of keeping it grounded and realFestivals or internet? How to decide where your short belongs“Asymmetric bets”: making fast, cheap work with huge upsideHustle, grit, and the necessary (healthy) delusion to survive this industryIf you enjoy OVATION, please leave a comment, thumbs up, or share with a friend!Links from the show:OVATION - Watch On YouTube!The Crossing Over ExpressLuke Barnett - InstagramLuke Barnett - XSign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday
    --------  
    1:02:15
  • DP’ing Jay Duplass' New Feature THE BALTIMORONS With Filmmaker Jon Bregel
    In this episode I’m joined by filmmaker Jon Bregel, who recently DP'd the new Jay Duplass feature film The Baltimorons - which premiered at this year's SXSW film festival, and was released theatrically in September via IFC Films.Throughout the interview we trace Jon's journey from leveraging Vimeo as a tool to launch a successful commercial career in New York, to stepping away and redefining what it means to be a working filmmaker. We dig into creative alignment, sustainable career building, and how a documentary-minded approach has shaped some of his recent work. Topics covered include:From Vimeo Staff Pick to a call from Nike -  early momentum in the Vimeo heydayBurnout, depression, and redefining success beyond money and prestigeHow to work like a professional, build routines, and treat freelancing like a real businessLanding The Baltimorons: and how “manifesting” opportunities really worksLighting quickly with tiny crews, embracing imperfection, and protecting spontaneityWhat Jon learned from Jay Duplass about presence, and generous leadershipPractical longevity: sustaining energy and morale across an indie feature scheduleLinks from the show:The Baltimorons - Movie SiteJon Bregel - Website & CoachingThe Nourish CommunitySign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday
    --------  
    57:47
  • Winning Kevin Smith’s Smodcastle with FOIBLES Writer / Director Ryan Oksenberg
    In this episode I am joined by longtime friend and fellow filmmaker Ryan Oksenberg, here to break down the making of his debut feature FOIBLES - a darkly comic, surreal satire about codependency and addiction.Throughout the episode we take a behind the scenes look at this feature - How Ryan greenlit the project himself, pulling off big set pieces on an indie budget, the 13-month post pipeline, music licensing reality checks, and taking home an award at Kevin Smith’s Smodcastle for best Actor.Topics covered include: Moving from shorts to a debut feature with a SAG Ultra Low Budget agreementBuilding a 40-person crew, and setting up basecamp at homePractical vs. digital: stunt days that don’t go to plan, and why it works in the editShot listing & storyboarding every beat vs. staying nimble on the dayCasting on a budget: personal letters, partnering with casting directorsPost for indies: cutting, feedback screenings, and when to let goMusic supervision 101: masters + publishing, MFN, festival vs. all-media licensesThe Kickstarter × Tubi path: hitting the goal to unlock a grant and AVOD distributionLinks from the show: FOIBLES — Official TrailerSupport FOIBLES on KickstarterSign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday.
    --------  
    1:00:32
  • Raising $400K, Casting Without Names, and Writing the Iron-Core Story with Mick Lexington
    In this episode filmmaker and novelist Mick Lexington joins me to unpack the development phase for his debut feature Mr. Jack - an existential New York drama adapted from his own novel.Through the interview we dig into the process of raising a ~$400K production budget, why he brought on a dedicated fundraising lead, and how his “agile filmmaking” approach allows him to start elements of production ahead of principle photography. We also dive deep on writing craft - outlining, “killing your darlings,” beating procrastination with consistent routines and much more.Topics include:Working with a fundraising specialist to raise a target budget of $400K“Agile filmmaking”: building momentum by shooting key exteriors ahead of producitonCasting strategy without star names and avoiding audience-misleading cameosTurning New York City into a story engine: LES & Williamsburg as living backdropWriting cadence & anti-procrastination: consistent daily blocks vs. burstsWhy the final rewrite is the edit - and planning for pickups and pivotsLinks from the show:Mr. Jack - WebsiteMick Lexington - WebsiteSign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday.
    --------  
    45:36

More TV & Film podcasts

About Show Don't Tell: Micro-Budget Filmmaking

Each week, filmmaker Noam Kroll shares valuable insight into the world of micro-budget filmmaking, geared towards true DIY filmmakers looking to get out there and create their own films.
Podcast website

Listen to Show Don't Tell: Micro-Budget Filmmaking, The Walsh Sisters: The Official Podcast and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features
Social
v7.23.11 | © 2007-2025 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 11/5/2025 - 9:48:39 AM