P.I. Filmmaker Podcast

#22: Catch (Up) 22

43 min · 10. juli 2026
episode #22: Catch (Up) 22 cover

Description

Following last week’s episode on guerrilla filmmaking, I catch up on the responses it generated, including a remarkable story from the making of Around the World in 80 Days (1956) and the provocative Lone Gun Manifesto - a filmmaking philosophy that argues the best way to make films is to strip the process back to its absolute essentials. The episode then turns to recent developments surrounding the Manchester Film Festival and the festival director’s unsuccessful Kickstarter campaign, prompting a wider discussion about power, ethics and the importance of challenging questionable behaviour - regardless of the industry you work in. Along the way, I discuss Sophy Romvari’s Blue Heron and respond to allegations that my film, Blurred Lines, had copied visual ideas from a student’s short film (https://letterboxd.com/psychedelic223/film/blurred-lines-2025/ [https://letterboxd.com/psychedelic223/film/blurred-lines-2025/]). Ultimately, it’s an episode that touches on the many Catch-22s of independent filmmaking: ask permission and you risk losing the authenticity you’re trying to capture; don’t ask permission and you risk not making the film at all. Take creative risks and you may be overlooked in favour of safer work; play it safe and you risk making work that nobody remembers. Stay silent and questionable behaviour goes unchallenged; speak up and you may face the consequences yourself.

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22 episodes

episode #22: Catch (Up) 22 artwork

#22: Catch (Up) 22

Following last week’s episode on guerrilla filmmaking, I catch up on the responses it generated, including a remarkable story from the making of Around the World in 80 Days (1956) and the provocative Lone Gun Manifesto - a filmmaking philosophy that argues the best way to make films is to strip the process back to its absolute essentials. The episode then turns to recent developments surrounding the Manchester Film Festival and the festival director’s unsuccessful Kickstarter campaign, prompting a wider discussion about power, ethics and the importance of challenging questionable behaviour - regardless of the industry you work in. Along the way, I discuss Sophy Romvari’s Blue Heron and respond to allegations that my film, Blurred Lines, had copied visual ideas from a student’s short film (https://letterboxd.com/psychedelic223/film/blurred-lines-2025/ [https://letterboxd.com/psychedelic223/film/blurred-lines-2025/]). Ultimately, it’s an episode that touches on the many Catch-22s of independent filmmaking: ask permission and you risk losing the authenticity you’re trying to capture; don’t ask permission and you risk not making the film at all. Take creative risks and you may be overlooked in favour of safer work; play it safe and you risk making work that nobody remembers. Stay silent and questionable behaviour goes unchallenged; speak up and you may face the consequences yourself.

10. juli 202643 min
episode #18: When Is A Film Finished? artwork

#18: When Is A Film Finished?

As my third feature ‘Notion’ moves closer to completion, I reflect on the often unseen final stages of independent filmmaking - the long process that continues after the cameras stop rolling. I discuss the reality of finishing a micro-budget feature: refining the edit, solving technical issues, stabilising shots, visual effects, colour grading, sound work and the difficult decisions around what needs fixing and what imperfections are simply part of the filmmaking process. I also reflect on the years spent completing both ‘Notion’ and ‘X’, including filming at Abbey Road around the same time Danny Boyle’s ‘Yesterday’ was announced and released, and how independent filmmaking often operates on a very different timeline. Along the way I discuss Werner Herzog’s ‘Fitzcarraldo’, ‘Festen’, Dogme 95, the changing expectations of audiences and why finishing a film is often the hardest part of making one. Ultimately, it’s a conversation about persistence, compromise and learning when to finally let go.

12. juni 202641 min