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cover of episode IFH 790: From Short to Feature: The Filmmaker’s Journey with Michael G. Kehoe

IFH 790: From Short to Feature: The Filmmaker’s Journey with Michael G. Kehoe

2025/2/18
logo of podcast Indie Film Hustle® - A Filmmaking Podcast

Indie Film Hustle® - A Filmmaking Podcast

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Michael G. Kehoe
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Michael G. Kehoe: 我从小受母亲的影响,立志从事电影行业。在追逐梦想的过程中,我与朋友们互相扶持,共同进步。虽然经历了一些挫折和不幸,但我从未放弃。我通过拍摄短片来积累经验,并最终将短片改编成长片。在电影制作过程中,我注重与摄影师、演员等合作,力求将最好的作品呈现给观众。我认为,电影制作人应该坚持自己的目标,不要为了获得资金而出卖自己的原则。同时,也要不断学习和提升自己的技能,与比自己聪明的人在一起,才能取得成功。此外,建立人脉和关注者也非常重要,可以利用社交网络宣传自己的作品。我希望我的经历能够激励更多的电影制作人,帮助他们实现自己的梦想。 Michael G. Kehoe: 我认为贫穷孕育创造力,在资源有限的情况下,电影制作人更需要发挥自己的创意和想象力。同时,我也非常注重电影的音效,认为好的音效可以提升电影的质量和观赏体验。在选择拍摄地点时,我会考虑到音效的因素,力求找到一个能够营造出最佳氛围的场所。此外,我也非常重视与演员的关系,认为与有才华的演员建立良好的关系非常重要,可以互相支持和帮助。我希望我的经验能够对其他电影制作人有所帮助,让他们在电影制作的道路上少走弯路。

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Chapters
Michael Kehoe's journey from a childhood fascination with his mother's community theater to his filmmaking career in Hollywood. The untimely deaths of two close friends served as a catalyst for his first short film, Second Dance, which propelled him to Sundance.
  • Early exposure to theater directing
  • Pact with friends to support each other's careers
  • Tragedy inspired first short film, Second Dance
  • Second Dance's success at Sundance

Shownotes Transcript

On today’s episode, we welcome Michael G. Kehoe, a filmmaker who turned a whisper of an idea into the resounding voice of a feature film. From Brooklyn to Hollywood, from an eight-year-old boy watching his mother direct community theater to a director commanding his own set, Michael’s journey is one of persistence, heartbreak, and sheer creative will.In this profound conversation, Michael G. Kehoe shares the winding road of his career, one marked by passion and loss. A pact among friends, the bright lights of New York, and the uncertainty of Los Angeles formed the backdrop to his early years. But it was a personal tragedy—the untimely passing of two close friends—that set the stage for his first short film, Second Dance. With no roadmap but a fierce determination, he crafted a story that not only resonated but landed him in the heart of Sundance, proving that even the smallest project can open the biggest doors.The journey didn’t stop there. Years later, inspired by his twin boys’ innocent bedtime fears, he penned a horror story that would eventually become The Hatred. Rather than waiting for a green light from the industry, he carved his own path. He created Hush, a short film that distilled the very essence of fear—the anticipation of the unknown.The reaction was immediate. Audiences jumped, festivals awarded, and industry heavyweights, including the producers behind Halloween, took notice. The lesson? The industry rewards those who show, not just tell.But success in Hollywood is rarely a straight road. Shooting The Hatred on a tight budget and an even tighter schedule meant adapting, improvising, and making every shot count. “Poverty breeds creativity,” Michael says, a testament to the resilience needed in independent filmmaking. Working with a largely female cast, he crafted a horror film that stood apart from the blood-soaked clichés, focusing instead on atmosphere, character, and tension. The result? A film that paid homage to the horror classics of the past while carving its own identity in the present.Of course, filmmaking is a collaborative art. Michael speaks of the relationships that make the journey worthwhile—the actors who return to work with him time and again, the cinematographers who bring his visions to life, and the producers who take a chance on passion over pedigree. “Surround yourself with people smarter than you,” he advises. A lesson as true for life as it is for film.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/indie-film-hustle-a-filmmaking-podcast--2664729/support).