Late Night with the Devil: Broadcasting Terror on $2M

Bref, recreating the past is usually an expensive trap. When a director says they want to set their film in the 1970s, the producers immediately start sweating. Period cars, period wardrobe, period licensing—it drains a budget faster than a bad storm. So, how did the Cairnes brothers manage to build a flawless 1977 American late-night television broadcast on a modest $2 million budget? They did what all great independent filmmakers do: they contained the madness. ...

April 20, 2024 · 3 min · François Rivette

The Babadook: The Mechanics of the Unseen

There is nothing more tragic than an independent horror film that tries to punch above its weight class with cheap CGI. The pixels tear the audience out of the narrative. When Jennifer Kent directed The Babadook on a $2 million budget, she understood a fundamental truth of the genre: if you cannot afford to render a monster perfectly, do not render it at all. You must build it. The Economy of Puppetry Kent enforced a strict mandate of in-camera, practical effects. There is no fully rendered, glossy digital demon chasing the protagonist. Instead, the production utilized tactile, physical techniques. They relied on meticulous stop-motion animation, shadow play, and terrifyingly crude puppetry. They engineered the actual, physical pop-up book that functions as the film’s cursed artifact. ...

March 23, 2024 · 2 min · François Rivette

Talk to Me: The YouTube to Feature Pipeline

Bref, the old guard of the film industry looks at YouTubers with a mixture of confusion and profound disdain. We see loud teenagers making prank videos and assume they have no discipline for the grueling marathon of feature filmmaking. But Danny and Michael Philippou proved exactly why this arrogance is fatal. With Talk to Me, they didn’t just transition from YouTube to a $4.5 million A24 feature; they brought the frantic, fearless energy of the internet and weaponized it within a traditional production structure. ...

August 1, 2023 · 3 min · François Rivette