

The No Film School Podcast
No Film School
A podcast about how to build a career in filmmaking. No Film School shares the latest opportunities and trends for anyone working in film and TV. We break news on cameras, lighting, and apps. We interview leaders in screenwriting, directing, cinematography, editing, and producing. And we answer your questions! We are dedicated to sharing knowledge with filmmakers around the globe, “no film school” required.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 27, 2025 • 1h 5min
Your Movie Is Out In The World. Now What?
In this episode, the tables are turned as No Film School host GG Hawkins becomes the interviewee, speaking with No Film School founder Ryan Koo about the journey of releasing her micro-budget feature I Really Love My Husband. The episode dives into the emotional, logistical, and marketing challenges of putting an independent film into the world after festival premieres and securing distribution. GG shares the lessons she’s learned, the unexpected hurdles she’s faced, and the importance of personal PR, audience-building, and staying true to your creative voice—especially when your movie doesn’t follow traditional paths or genres.
In this episode, No Film School’s Ryan Koo and GG Hawkins discuss...
The overwhelming and technical process of delivering a film to distributors and platforms
How to strategically approach festival and release PR, including budgeting and outreach
The importance of having a “community producer” to build your audience from day one
Lessons learned from critical feedback, press rejections, and audience reactions
How to navigate marketing when your film doesn’t fit neatly into genre boxes
The value of making work that represents your voice—even if it’s not a commercial hit
What filmmakers should always be working on while waiting for the "yes" from the industry
Memorable Quotes:
"I would rather make something that makes people feel things one way or the other versus sort of like a lukewarm back."
"The only way to know how to make a movie is to make a movie... and then make another."
"Greenlight yourself. That is the most important thing any of us can be doing."
"It is not the time to pinch pennies... this is the time to spend it.”
Resources:
How to Write a Movie that Shoots in Three Months
You’re Picture Locked. Now What? (Plus Dir. Ruben Fleischer!)
Filmmaker’s Guide to SXSW: Tips, Takeaways, Tough Lessons
Watch I Really Love My Husband:
Apple
Amazon
Google Play
and more
Find No Film School everywhere:
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Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
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📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 24, 2025 • 44min
How 'The Plague' Perfected the Horror of Growing Up
Host GG Hawkins sits down with filmmaker Charlie Polinger to unpack the making of his debut feature, The Plague. Polinger discusses his transition from theater to film, the personal childhood memories that shaped the story, and how embracing chaos—rather than controlling it—became central to his directing process. From casting an electrifying ensemble of young actors to shaping dread through sound design and editing, the conversation explores how specificity, vulnerability, and trust can turn a coming-of-age story into psychological horror.
In this episode, No Film School's GG Hawkins and guest discuss…
Transitioning from theater directing to feature filmmaking
Drawing from childhood memory to create visceral, psychological horror
Why a boys’ water polo camp became the perfect contained setting
Casting and directing a large ensemble of young actors
Letting location do the storytelling heavy lifting
Embracing chaos on set instead of fighting it
Building anxiety through sound design and post-production rhythm
Hands-on collaboration in the edit and score development
Advice for emerging filmmakers on making work consistently
Memorable Quotes:
“I just wanted to create a really kind of visceral, subjective, psychological experience of being a 12-year-old boy.”
“There’s strategy built into the cruelty and the violence and getting away with it—and that felt really ripe cinematically.
“The space is sort of like a character in this film.”
“The more I put out into the world, the more that the world gave back.”
Guest:
Charlie Polinger
Resources:
The Plague EP by Lexi Tannenholtz on Cannes first-timers: A First-Timer’s Guide to the Cannes Film Festival
Find No Film School everywhere:
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Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 21, 2025 • 58min
One Lens, One Vision: The Cinematography of 'The Creator'
In this episode, host Charles Haine sits down with cinematographer Oren Soffer to dive deep into the groundbreaking and much-discussed visual style of The Creator. As the co-DP alongside Greig Fraser, Soffer shares how they achieved the film’s unique aesthetic using a prosumer Sony FX3 camera, a single vintage lens, and a minimalist, indie-inspired production model. This discussion covers everything from lighting choices and VFX collaboration to gear workflows and lens testing, offering an in-depth look at how one of the year's most visually striking sci-fi films was crafted.
In this episode, No Film School's Charles Haine and guest Oren Soffer discuss...
How Oren Soffer became co-DP on The Creator alongside Greig Fraser
The decision to shoot 95% of the film on one vintage 75mm Kowa anamorphic lens
Using the Sony FX3 with an Atomos Ninja for ProRes RAW capture
The benefits of designing visual effects around photography rather than the reverse
Lighting choices inspired by naturalism and a small-footprint, indie ethos
The influence of films like Baraka and Rogue One on the visual approach
Operating with a nimble crew and custom-built gimbal rigs
Remote collaboration between Soffer, Fraser, and director Gareth Edwards
The impact of location shooting across Southeast Asia
Memorable Quotes:
"We shot 95 percent of the movie on a single focal length, which is the Kowa Cine Prominar... you're baking the look into the image."
"The way to make visual effects feel more real is to let the photography lead."
"We wanted to shoot this big movie as if it’s this tiny road movie."
"It was an indie film with a 90-day shoot schedule and a full stunt team... but the filmmaking process itself felt really scrappy in the best way possible."
Guest:
Oren Soffer
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📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 18, 2025 • 53min
How Earning an Actor’s Trust as a Director Can Drive Your Career
Allan Ungar started directing features at just 23 and has since evolved into a filmmaker known for his action-comedy chops and ability to elicit career-best performances from his actors. In this episode, he sits down with No Film School host, GG Hawkins, to discuss how his approach has matured from rigid control to meaningful collaboration, why psychological insight is essential for directors, and how to create an environment where actors can thrive. From early experiments with camcorders to directing viral hits and the critically acclaimed Bandit and London Calling, Ungar shares a masterclass in the art and strategy of long-term career building in film.
In this episode, No Film School's GG Hawkins and guest Allan Ungar discuss...
Why understanding actor psychology is key to strong performances
How Ungar transitioned from controlling sets to creating collaborative environments
Techniques to push actors without breaking trust
The evolution of Ungar’s directing style across films like Bandit and London Calling
Building a career in chapters and managing “hurry up and wait” downtime
Why creating your own opportunities is essential in today’s film landscape
The importance of casting actors who can improvise and bring ideas
How to know when a joke or moment fits the tone of a scene
Advice for emerging filmmakers navigating their first projects
Memorable Quotes:
"Directing is more than just a creative outlet. You have to be good with people."
"To be a filmmaker that's in control, you have to let go of control."
"I leave no stone unturned. If I don't feel like I have it, I will push until we have it."
"You have to figure out how to greenlight yourself."
Guest:
Allan Ungar
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📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 12, 2025 • 42min
From Book to Big Screen: Rebecca Sonnenshine’s Adaptation Playbook (The Housemaid, The Boys)
Screenwriter and showrunner Rebecca Sonnenshine joins the No Film School Podcast to unpack her career and creative process behind hit adaptations including The Boys and The Housemaid. She shares how she got her start, how she discovered her voice in genre, and the intense pitch process behind landing The Housemaid. Rebecca also offers practical advice for writing contained stories, building a compelling script from source material, and creating work that audiences actually want to watch. She shares how she got her start, how she discovered her voice in genre, and the intense pitch process behind landing The Housemaid. Rebecca also offers practical advice for writing contained stories, building a compelling script from source material, and creating work that audiences actually want to watch.
In this episode, No Film School's GG Hawkins and guest Rebecca Sonnenshine discuss...
How Rebecca’s early jobs and script coverage experience helped her become a screenwriter
Why she embraced genre writing and how her perspective as a woman informs her work
The pitch process for adapting The Housemaid, and how she knew it was the right fit
How she avoids voiceover and instead finds cinematic ways to externalize internal character thoughts
The importance of blocking and movement when writing contained, single-location stories
Her writing habits: page goals, scene sketching, talking out dialogue, and more
What filmmakers can learn from writing bottle episodes or adapting material
Why thinking about your audience is key to writing something people actually want to watch
Memorable Quotes:
"I read something and it either clicks or it doesn’t."
"Pitching… takes a long time. You need all the twists and turns… but not more than 28 minutes."
"I don’t love voiceover. So I had to find a device in which we could get some of their thoughts out."
"Blocking is everything. If you’re not thinking about blocking while you’re writing, then you’re doing your project a disservice."
Guests:
Rebecca Sonnenshine
Find No Film School everywhere:
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📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 10, 2025 • 1h 7min
David Zaslav Will Make Nearly $1 Billion From Selling Warner Bros. to Netflix (or Paramount). How Much Will Filmmakers Make?
In this episode, No Film School founder Ryan Koo and host GG Hawkins, along with producer and guest Ana Liza Muravina, dig into the ramifications of the news that Netflix is bidding (or may be outbid by Paramount) to acquire Warner Brothers — and what this massive consolidation could mean for the future of theatrical film, streaming, and the livelihoods of filmmakers.
In this episode, No Film School's Ryan Koo, GG Hawkins, and guest Ana Liza Muravina discuss...
How theatrical attendance has been in decline for decades, long before COVID — from the post–World War II boom through the arrival of television, home video, and streaming.
Why the recent surge in acquisitions and mergers (from Comcast/Universal, Disney/Fox, Amazon/MGM, to the potential Netflix–Warner deal) spells trouble for market competition in both production and distribution.
What consolidation means for filmmakers trying to get projects financed and sold — fewer buyers, fewer distribution windows, and diminished bidding wars that once supported indie and mid‑budget films.
The potential financial upside for studios and executives (like David Zaslav), contrasted with the limited upside — or none — for writers, directors, actors, and other creative laborers.
The possible benefits of global streaming platforms: ability to reach worldwide audiences, support for diverse or niche stories (e.g., a basketball movie about a young Black player), and access for filmmakers outside traditional Hollywood systems.
How now more than ever filmmakers might need to pivot: embrace scrappy, independent means of production/distribution, build creative communities, and consider alternate funding — rather than relying on traditional studio financing and residual structures.
That this may be a painful but necessary transition: the collapse of one ecosystem could open space for a new kind of filmmaking — more distinct voices, counterculture, experimentation, and potentially a new model for how films get made and distributed.
Memorable Quotes:
“I pitched my Netflix movie 80 times — I got 79 no’s and I got one yes.”
“In a world where all the ways in which my piece of content can be exploited … are concentrated, it forces you to think about what are the other sources.”
“You hit pause, you hibernate for a minute … and you don’t feel like that’s the end of the freaking world.”
“This is the math all of us are doing all the time … If you follow one person benefiting to the tune of a billion dollars … from the sale of a company … it tells you exactly why so many people had to leave L.A…”
Guests:
Ana Liza Muravina
Resources:
Ana Liza's Previous No Film School Appearance
'Prince of Broadway' Director Sean Baker on No-Budget Filmmaking, Improvisation, and Long Release Cycles
Find No Film School everywhere:
On the Web: No Film School (https://nofilmschool.com/)
Facebook: No Film School on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/nofilmschool)
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter (https://twitter.com/nofilmschool)
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/user/nofilmschool)
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/nofilmschool)
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Dec 5, 2025 • 51min
How Queer, Gender-Fluid DP Gayle Ye Is Transforming Set Culture From Within
In this episode, cinematographer Gayle Ye joins host GG Hawkins for an intimate and wide-ranging conversation about artistry, identity, and what it means to lead with authenticity as a DP. Gayle, who recently won a Canadian Screen Award for Paying For It and Late Bloomer, breaks down their creative process, from building visual language to managing crew dynamics. As the youngest and first queer, gender-fluid person of color to win a Daytime Emmy for lighting design, Gayle shares how they use their voice and position to advocate for meaningful change in the industry—on set and beyond.
In this episode, No Film School's GG Hawkins and guest Gayle Ye discuss...
Gayle's path from shooting webcam videos in high school to winning a Daytime Emmy
How their background in editing informs their cinematography
Visual strategies and “cinematography pillars” used in Paying For It
Shooting intimacy scenes with care and collaboration
Why being a “Dream Manager” is a key part of being a DP
The role of mentorship, advocacy, and representation in Gayle’s career
Building visual tone in dramedy series Late Bloomer
Advice for underrepresented filmmakers breaking into the industry
Memorable Quotes:
“I preferred to be on set for 14 hours than in a dark room for eight.”
“I'm not here to just show up and throw all my cool shot ideas. I really need to immerse myself in the story.”
“If I made it, then it’s an Asian and queer film. It doesn’t matter what the content is.”
“A DP is also a Dream Manager—negotiating between vision and budget.”
Guests:
Gayle Ye
Resources:
BIPOC TV & Film
Canadian Film Centre
Scriptation
GoodNotes
Artemis Pro
Sunseeker App
Find No Film School everywhere:
On the Web: No Film School
Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Nov 21, 2025 • 42min
Documenting the Business of Fear: Inside HBO’s 'Thoughts & Prayers'
GG Hawkins speaks with directors Jessica Dimmock and Zackary Canepari about their haunting and thought-provoking HBO documentary Thoughts & Prayers. The film offers a chillingly observational look at the normalization of school shootings in America—not by focusing on the tragedies themselves, but by examining the surreal, billion-dollar industry of “school safety” that's risen in their aftermath. Through restrained cinematography and a surprisingly dark sense of humor, Dimmock and Canepari capture how everyday life continues against the backdrop of unimaginable trauma, and how children are often more articulate than adults about the realities they face.
In this episode, No Film School's GG Hawkins and guests discuss...
How the project evolved from a photo series to a full-length documentary
The cultural and industrial normalization of school shootings in America
Why the film avoids graphic depictions of violence and instead focuses on the systems around it
The use of stillness, humor, and wide shots as storytelling tools
Casting nontraditional “characters” in a documentary format
The emotional challenges of working with children on such a sensitive topic
Co-directing as creative collaborators and partners
The gear and post-production tools that made the film possible
Why the title Thoughts & Prayers was chosen and how satire plays into it
Memorable Quotes:
"In the middle of learning your ABCs, you pause to practice for mass death, and then you go back to learning... that's the chilling part."
"Cut this more like a scene in a Christopher Guest film than in an important documentary.”
"None of the adults ever say anything about guns... it's always the kids."
"We're not going to practice our way out of this."
Guests:
Jessica Dimmock
Zackary Canepari
Resources:
Thoughts & Prayers on HBO
Find No Film School everywhere:
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Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Nov 14, 2025 • 1h 35min
You’re Picture Locked. Now What? (Plus Dir. Ruben Fleischer!)
In this episode of the No Film School podcast, GG Hawkins and Ryan Koo dig into the often‑murky world of film release strategy and distribution from multiple angles—and then sit down with acclaimed filmmaker Ruben Fleischer to trace his path from indie start to big‑budget studio productions.
In this episode, No Film School’s GG Hawkins, Ryan Koo, and guest Ruben Fleischer discuss…
GG’s journey with her micro‑budget feature I Really Love My Husband: festival strategy, light theatrical run, and streaming rollout
The importance of marketing and audience‑building even for indie films (“the extra 50% of effort after picture‑lock”)
Festival submission strategy: premium “buyer’s festivals” vs regional festivals, world‑premiere constraints, and timing decisions
Tools and tactics: creating trailer/sizzle assets, leveraging sales & festival reps, doing the reference‑check on distributors
Real‑world rejection: extracting learning from “pass” notes and small deals, how to choose between flashy name vs partner who will work for you
The one‑to‑one interview with Ruben Fleischer: his early career, moving from shorts/commmercials to features, how he handles large‑scale shoots, visualising scenes, leading big crews, and navigating reshoots
Ruben’s key pieces of advice for emerging filmmakers: making things now, learning by doing, honing your craft by continuing to create
A bonus deep‑dive into how even locked‑picture films still require a lot of narrative strategy, deliverables, and business savvy in order to land distribution
Memorable Quotes:
“If you are going to bend over backwards, invest all this time, energy, and effort into making a film, but you’re not going to do the same for getting the word out there … you are setting yourself up for failure.”
“Submitting to a film festival is like getting down on one knee and asking someone to marry you, but then you have to wait months for the response.”
“I always go in with an intention of how I would imagine blocking the scene… but I’m also very flexible in working with actors.”
“The only real way to direct stuff is to go out and do it.”
Guests:
Ruben Fleischer
Resources:
Shoot in Three Months – No Film School
Filmmaker’s Guide to SXSW – No Film School
A First‑Timer’s Guide to the Cannes Film Festival – No Film School
Microbudget Filmmaker Podcast – No Film School
Why Indie Film Distribution Is About to Go Punk Rock – No Film School
Where to watch I Really Love My Husband:
Apple TV: I Really Love My Husband
Amazon: I Really Love My Husband
Google Play: I Really Love My Husband
Where to watch Amateur (Ryan’s first feature): Netflix
Ryan’s podcast series First Feature – a case study about the making of Amateur: SoundCloud – No Film School
Find No Film School everywhere:
On the Web: No Film School (https://nofilmschool.com/)
Facebook: No Film School on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/nofilmschool)
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter (https://twitter.com/nofilmschool)
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/user/nofilmschool)
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/nofilmschool)
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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Nov 13, 2025 • 51min
How We Are Reclaiming Development
The current state of Hollywood script development is chaotic, to say the least—but what if there were a way to reclaim it for writers? In this episode, guest host Charles Haine returns to No Film School to speak with Brian Austin and Scott Foster, the creators behind ScriptHop and the newly launched The Gauntlet. They dive into how the traditional process of script discovery has broken down and explore how the Gauntlet offers a transformative path forward—one that empowers writers with meaningful feedback, professional endorsements, and real chances at industry attention.
In this episode, No Film School's Charles Haine and guests discuss...
The breakdown of traditional story departments at major agencies and studios
How ScriptHop began as a library tool and evolved into a platform empowering writers
The creation of “The Packet” to help writers better market their scripts
Why Script Gauntlet isn’t just another screenwriting contest
How the Gauntlet provides detailed, collaborative feedback from active industry professionals
Why professional endorsements through the Gauntlet could change the script discovery game
Their strategy for launching scripts through curated industry slates
Memorable Quotes:
"Hollywood is kind of a pro-spaceship town."
"It is so crazy to me that the first guard of feedback is... so untested."
"This is the best reader dollars I've ever spent."
"We're going to be a more important aggregator of analysis than say Rotten Tomatoes."
Guests:
Brian Austin
Scott Foster
Resources:
ScriptHop
The Gauntlet
Find No Film School everywhere:
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Facebook: No Film School on Facebook
Twitter: No Film School on Twitter
YouTube: No Film School on YouTube
Instagram: No Film School on Instagram
📩 Send us an email with questions or feedback: podcast@nofilmschool.com
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