Ep. 11 - “Filming in the Florida Swamps Nearly Broke Us”: Adam Rioux on Urchins | MFF 11
Adam Rioux made his debut feature Urchins in the swamps, forests, and forgotten backroads of rural Florida, and nearly got destroyed by the process. From seven rain delays on day one to losing a lead actor less than two weeks before production, Adam’s journey to making his first feature is a masterclass in indie filmmaking survival.
Before directing Urchins, Adam shot sorority promo videos across Florida, operated Camera Car Arms on Marvel productions, and slowly built a filmmaking career through hustle, community, and pure obsession with storytelling. In this episode, he breaks down how he crowdfunded the film, found collaborators through social media, rewrote the script during production, edited the movie while shooting, and pulled off a 16-day feature shoot in brutal Florida weather.
We also talk about the realities of first-time feature filmmaking: why every indie film needs pickup days, the changing landscape of festivals and distribution, working with a tiny crew, and how authenticity, not perfection, became the thing that attracted people to the project in the first place.
Stick around until the end for a big update on Petunia, my debut feature, including picture lock, color, music, VFX, and what post-production has actually been like after wrapping principal photography.