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cover of episode IFH 795: Balancing Hollywood Productions and Indie Passion Projects with Jamie Buckner

IFH 795: Balancing Hollywood Productions and Indie Passion Projects with Jamie Buckner

2025/3/25
logo of podcast Indie Film Hustle® - A Filmmaking Podcast

Indie Film Hustle® - A Filmmaking Podcast

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Jamie Buckner: 我从高中时期就对电影制作充满热情,并逐渐意识到自己对绘画、音乐、建筑和电影的热爱都融合在电影制作中。在从事好莱坞电影制作的期间,我始终坚持创作,不断地改写、润色和完善我的电影剧本《Split》。我认为创作能力就像肌肉一样,需要经常锻炼才能保持活力。即使工作再忙,我也会利用一切空闲时间进行创作,包括在片场收工后加班,或者在周末进行创作。在创作过程中,我学习了如何筹集资金、组建团队以及进行市场推广等技能。最终,我成功地完成了我的独立电影《Split》。 在好莱坞工作期间,我阅读了许多电影剧本,这对我自己的剧本创作产生了很大的影响。我学习到优秀的写作技巧,并从不同的角度看待故事创作。同时,我也从好莱坞的电影制作流程中学到了很多宝贵的经验,这些经验都应用在我的独立电影制作中。 我的电影《Split》是一部轻松愉快的保龄球主题浪漫喜剧,目标是让观众在观影后感到开心,并想去保龄球馆玩。虽然在发行过程中遇到了一些挑战,例如与另一部同名电影的冲突,但我坚持自己的作品,并最终通过各种平台成功发行我的电影。 我的建议是,如果你真心热爱电影创作,就不要被任何困难阻挡,坚持创作并完成你的作品,因为现在有很多途径可以分享你的故事。 Alex Ferrari: 作为节目的主持人,我主要负责引导访谈的流程,并就Jamie Buckner的职业生涯、电影创作经验以及独立电影制作的挑战等方面提出问题。我引导Jamie Buckner分享了他从业经历,从在《Seabiscuit》中担任临时演员到参与《John Wick 2》等好莱坞大片的制作,以及他如何平衡好莱坞工作与独立电影创作之间的关系。我还与Jamie Buckner讨论了剧本创作、电影融资、电影发行等话题,并分享了一些行业经验和见解。 Dave Bullis: 作为联合主持人,我主要负责与Jamie Buckner进行深入的交流,并就他电影创作的细节、遇到的挑战以及如何克服这些挑战等方面提出问题。我与Jamie Buckner讨论了电影《Split》的创作过程,包括剧本创作、拍摄、后期制作以及发行等方面。我还就电影名称与另一部同名电影的冲突,以及如何解决这个问题等方面进行了探讨。此外,我还与Jamie Buckner就电影行业的技术发展、VR技术在电影制作中的应用以及独立电影制作的未来发展趋势等方面进行了交流。

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Jamie Buckner discusses his journey from dabbling in various creative fields to realizing his passion for filmmaking. He shares how he started with extra work on 'Seabiscuit' and worked his way up in the industry.
  • Jamie Buckner initially explored art, music, and architecture before settling on film.
  • He attended Northern Kentucky University for theater and e-media, as it lacked a film program.
  • His first film experience was as an extra in 'Seabiscuit', shot in Lexington.
  • Jamie moved to New York, working on productions like 'The Honeymooners' and 'War of the Worlds'.
  • He networked extensively, leading to consistent production work in New York.

Shownotes Transcript

Some stories unfold not with a bang, but with the echo of a bowling ball rolling down a waxed lane—steady, unpredictable, and brimming with hidden intention. On today’s episode, we welcome a filmmaker whose journey is stitched together with sweat-soaked call sheets, stubborn creative grit, and a romance with storytelling that stretches back to a Sunglass Hut in Cincinnati. Jamie Buckner is a writer, director, and production coordinator who took a simple idea—a romantic comedy set in a bowling alley—and transformed it into a heartfelt indie film with an uncanny twin name.What unfolds in this conversation is not just the tale of a film called Split, but the soul of a storyteller who refused to let his creative voice be muffled by the chaos of working behind the scenes on massive Hollywood productions.Jamie shares how he stitched together moments between 14-hour workdays, late-night office hours, and endless sets to keep rewriting, reworking, and resurrecting the script for Split. “The creative muscle will atrophy if you don’t exercise it,” he says. In that moment, you understand that this is no ordinary guest; this is someone for whom storytelling is oxygen.His story reads like a modern parable for artists. From early days bouncing between dreams of music, architecture, and comic books, Jamie landed on film—not by plan, but by epiphany. He describes it beautifully, realizing that all his interests merged in filmmaking, the perfect cocktail of drawing, sound, emotion, and movement. And thus began the pilgrimage: extra work on Seabiscuit, gigs on War of the Worlds, and a life that kept knocking until the door opened just enough to let the artist through.But the magic, as it often does, lived in the in-between. While others went to happy hour, Jamie stayed late in the office to write. While his peers chased security in crew roles, he wrestled with Kickstarter campaigns, coordinated sizzle reels (or “proof of concept” pieces, as he prefers), and asked himself the questions that every creative must ask: "Will I do this until I’m sixty and just look back, or will I carve out the time now?" He chose the latter—and Split was born.There’s something charming about how he talks of making “a cute little bowling movie,” while casually referencing that its short film starred future television stars. It’s clear he walks both worlds with ease: the guy who’s worked on John Wick 2, and the indie soul who still geeks out about local comic shops. He’s aware of the absurdity too: that his film shares its name with M. Night Shyamalan’s thriller. He laughs about mistaken identities, mistaken downloads, and audience confusion, but stands firm. "We were here first," he says. And in that defiant simplicity lies the heart of a creator.Jamie’s approach to art is like that of a Zen archer—disciplined but loose, always aiming, never rigid. He offers a quiet but potent kind of wisdom, the kind that doesn’t shout but sticks with you. “If you're not doing this because you love it, then you're legitimately a crazy person,” he jokes. And yet, one feels the profound truth in those words. In a world spinning faster each day, where even scripts get locked down like government secrets, Jamie reminds us that what matters is finishing what you start—and doing it with heart.Like a good film, Jamie Buckner's journey doesn't resolve in neat lines. It's ongoing, filled with projects still to be written, scenes yet to be shot, and audiences still to discover the little movie that could. But what stays with you is not the resume or the name confusion. It’s the voice behind the words, the love behind the lens. He’s not just telling a story—he’s reminding you why stories matter.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/indie-film-hustle-a-filmmaking-podcast--2664729/support).