PODCAST · tv
Hollywood Film Coach
by Bob Degus
A multi-episode masterclass in award-winning short filmmaking — from an Oscar voter who has watched more than 3,000 of them. The gap between a good short film and an award-winning one is smaller than you think. Host Bob Degus — Oscar voter, producer of Pleasantville, and 30-year Academy member — is here to help you close it.
-
5
Episode 9: The Producer's Eye: How Thinking Like a Producer Makes You a Better Director
The same year a short film I produced was nominated for an Oscar, I directed my own short film. It didn't get nominated. For years I thought that was just bad luck. It wasn't. I was living too much in my producer head as a director — and not enough in the creative choices the film actually needed.In this episode, I break down what a producer actually does at every stage of a film, why the best directors I've ever worked with can hold both jobs in their head at once, and how learning to think like a producer — even a little — makes you a stronger director. I'll share stories from my own career, including watching David Fincher and a first-time indie director handle the exact same studio situation in opposite ways, with very different results.In this episode:What a producer actually is — and the three things it's commonly mistaken forThe one or two elements every film has that a producer must protect, no matter the costThe questions a producer should be asking at development, production, and post-productionWhat happened when I directed my own short film with too much "producer brain"David Fincher vs. a first-time director: two approaches to managing the studio, and only one that workedA simple habit for developing your own producer's instincts, starting with how you watch other people's filmsWhy you should lean into your strengths instead of fixing your weaknesses — and find a partner who covers the restFor the companion piece to this episode, head to hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.
-
4
Episode 8: Festival Strategy: How to Get Your Film Seen and Win
Episode 8: Festival Strategy: How to Get Your Film Seen and Win11,153 short films were submitted to Sundance in 2025. They selected 57. Cannes, Toronto, and Berlin tell roughly the same story. Those numbers aren't meant to discourage you — but they should convince you that submitting your film without a strategy is like buying a lottery ticket.In this episode, I break down exactly how festivals actually review thousands of submissions, the three tiers of film festivals and how to use them strategically, the four questions you need to answer before you submit anywhere, and what it really takes to protect your Oscar eligibility along the way.In this episode:How a festival actually narrows 10,000 submissions down to the films you see on screenThe three tiers of film festivals — and why submission order matters more than you thinkThe four questions that should drive your entire festival strategyThe YouTube and TV mistakes that can quietly disqualify your film from Oscar considerationWhat festival programmers are really looking for — and how to write a director's statement that gets noticedA look inside the Oscar submission process itselfFor the companion piece to this episode, head to hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
3
EPISODE 7: The Short Film That Launched Brad Pitt — And What It Teaches Us
EPISODE 7: The Short Film That Launched Brad Pitt — And What It Teaches UsIn 1992, we cast a young, unknown actor in a short film made on a shoestring budget, shot in brutal desert heat, with a crew that was learning their jobs as they went. That actor's name was Brad Pitt. The film was nominated for an Oscar. And the making of it was nowhere near as smooth as the highlight reel makes it look.In this episode, I tell the full story of Contact — the casting, the heat, the cue cards, the tension between a first-time director and a soon-to-be movie star — and what it taught me about the difference between star power and true collaboration. It's a story I've never told quite this honestly before, and I think it'll change how you think about who you cast in your own film.In this episode:How an unknown Brad Pitt ended up in a low-budget Oscar-nominated shortWhy shooting the exterior scenes first nearly broke the productionThe line problem that led to a controversial decision — and whether I'd make it againA second story, about a different actor, that still gets me choked upThe real lesson: how to judge collaborative fit before you ever say "action"For the full story behind this episode, head to hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
2
Working With Actors: What Every Film Director Needs to Know
Episode 6: Working With Actors: What Every Short Film Director Needs to KnowI've watched short films in the Oscar screening room where the cinematography was beautiful, the production design was stunning, the story structure was solid — and the film didn't make the shortlist. Because the performances weren't there. And I've watched films with modest budgets and no-name actors that made a room full of Academy voters go completely quiet. Because the performances were extraordinary. After 30 years as an Oscar voter, I know this: you can recover from a weak location. You can recover from imperfect lighting. You cannot recover from a false performance on screen.Actors aren't just part of your story. They are your story. And how you work with them — how you cast them, how you prepare them, how you protect them on set — is the most consequential set of skills you will ever develop as a filmmaker. In this episode, I go deep on all of it: what makes acting in short films uniquely demanding, what directing actors actually means (and what it doesn't), how to cast with ruthless honesty, why most short film directors get rehearsal wrong, and what I've learned from watching thousands of performances in the Oscar screening room about what separates the ones that stay with you from the ones that don't.In this episode:• Why acting in short films has its own specific demands — distinct from feature filmmaking and distinct from theater• What directing actors actually is — and the four most common mistakes directors make when working with performers• Why the director's job is to create the conditions for a great performance, not to perform the role for the actor• Why casting is the single most important creative decision a director makes — and how to do it with ruthless honesty• The five qualities to look for when casting a short film: emotional availability, specificity, presence, intelligence, and trust• Why a brilliant performance by an unknown actor will always outweigh a good performance by a famous one• What rehearsal is actually for — and why most short film directors dramatically underinvest in it• The table read: why it matters, what it reveals, and the one script mistake that will undermine your actors before you even roll camera• How to give direction that works — the critical difference between giving an actor a result and giving them a circumstance• Why "you're sad in this scene" doesn't help — and what to say instead• The three qualities that define the performances that stay with you: truth, stillness, and surprise• A personal story from the set of Pleasantville — and what Joan Allen's arrival taught me about how one extraordinary performance can elevate an entire film• Book recommendation: Directing Actors by Judith Weston — the one book on filmmaking every director should readFind the companion piece for this episode — original writing that goes deeper — at hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.comVisit The Hollywood Film Coach website.---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
1
Episode 5: Story is Everything: The Non-Negotiable Foundation
Episode 5: Story is Everything: The Non-Negotiable FoundationAfter 40 years in Hollywood and more than 3,000 short films watched as an Oscar voter, I can tell you this with certainty: the single most important element in any short film — the one that cannot be faked, cannot be bought, and cannot be compensated for by any amount of technical skill — is story.Not plot. Not concept. Not theme. Story.In this episode, I use Stutterer — the Oscar-winning Irish short film made for approximately €5,500 by a first-time director with no stars — to show you exactly what story means in a short film, why it's different from every other element of filmmaking, and how to find the story that only you can tell.What you'll learn in this episode:— Why plot, concept, theme, and style are not story — and what story actually is — The three things every great short film story must have: a character we care about immediately, genuine stakes, and a journey with a destination — How short film structure differs from feature film structure — and the one part of your film that carries disproportionate weight — The critical difference between a strong concept and a strong story, and why confusing the two is the most common mistake I see in emerging filmmaker submissions — The three questions I ask every filmmaker I mentor to help them find the story only they can tell.Stutterer won the Oscar not because of its budget, its cast, or its production design. It won because Benjamin Cleary told a story he had a specific, urgent, irreplaceable connection to — and structured it with complete mastery.The gap between a good short film and an award-winning one is smaller than you think. This episode will help you close it.Find links to watch Stutterer and the companion piece for this episode at hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
0
What Oscar Voters Actually Look For...
EPISODE 4: What Oscar Voters Actually Look For... Every filmmaker wonders about it. Who are these people deciding which short films get nominated for an Oscar? What are they actually looking for? And is there anything you can do to improve your chances with them? The answer to that last question is yes. And it starts with understanding something most filmmakers never think about: Oscar voters are not critics. They're not industry executives. They're filmmakers — people who have made short films themselves, who know exactly how hard it is, and who are watching your work with the same mix of hope and hard-earned expertise you bring to watching someone else's. In this episode, I take you inside the room — inside the thinking, the emotional arc, and the actual experience of an Oscar voter watching short films — so you can use that knowledge to make your film stronger. In this episode: • Who Oscar voters really are — and why that changes everything about how you should think about your film• How the Academy's short film branch is structured, and what makes it unique among all the Academy's branches• Why big budgets and famous actors don't give films an advantage — and sometimes work against them• The voting process, from screening rooms to streaming, and what that means for how films get evaluated• The danger of the "one-viewing film" — and why a great first impression isn't enough• The emotional arc every voter goes through, from the first 90 seconds to the final credits• What voters respond to most: authenticity, real performance, surprise, and memorability• The instant "no" — the things that signal to a voter that a film won't be making the list• The single most important thing an Oscar-nominated film has that others don't• Three questions to ask yourself when you watch your own film back For the companion piece — original writing that goes deeper into the most powerful idea from this episode — visit hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.New episodes drop every Tuesday at 5 AM Eastern Time. Subscribe and never miss one.---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
-1
The Number One Mistake That Kills Most Short Films
EPISODE 3: The #1 Mistake That Kills Most Short Films In 30 years of watching more than 3,000 short films as an Oscar voter, I've seen the same mistake kill otherwise great films over and over again. Films with beautiful cinematography. Strong performances. Real passion behind them. All undone by one thing. And almost no one talks about it. The mistake isn't weak acting or poor lighting. It's something more fundamental — and more fixable. It's making a film that doesn't know what it's about. In this episode, I break down exactly what that means, why it's so hard to see in your own work, and what you can do about it — whether your film is still on the page, in production, or already in the edit. In this episode:- Why plot and premise are not the same thing — and why confusing them is the most common reason short films fail to connect- How Everything Everywhere All at Once and The Wizard of Oz illustrate the difference between what happens and what a film is truly about- The danger of serving too many ideas at once — and why ambitious short films often collapse under the weight of their own ideas- Two tests you can apply to your film right now: the one-sentence test and the stranger test- How to work backwards from your ending to find the emotional core of your story- The short film I directed that didn't get nominated for an Oscar — and what I finally understood years later about why Find the companion piece to this episode — and go deeper on the most important idea from today — at HollywoodFilmCoach.substack.com---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
-2
What I Learned Watching 3,000 Short Films!
EPISODE 2: What I Learned Watching 3,000 Short FilmsTwenty seconds into a short film called Wasp, I knew I was watching something extraordinary. A woman — barefoot, in a nightgown — sprinting down a staircase with four children and a diaperless baby. No setup. No title card. Just a story that grabbed you by the collar and refused to let go.That film went on to win the Oscar. And after thirty years of voting and more than 3,000 short films, I can tell you exactly why.In this episode, I break down the patterns I've observed across thousands of short films — the ones that win and the ones that don't. Not theory. Not film school abstractions. What I actually watched happen, over and over, in a screening room full of Academy voters.What we cover:— What 3,000 short films looks like as an education, and the moment observations become certainties— The five things every great short film has in common (and why most filmmakers get at least two of them wrong)— The five patterns that show up in forgettable films — and why these are mistakes born of inexperience, not lack of talent— The film that most surprised me: how a group of college students made a short film that beat everything else in the room to win the Oscar— Five questions you can ask yourself right now — about your script, your cut, or your idea — that will immediately sharpen your workThis episode is the payoff on Episode 1's promise: that the gap between a good short film and an award-winning one is smaller than you think. Here's where that gap lives — and how to close it.The companion piece for this episode — including links to all three films discussed — is at hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.---Hollywood Film Coach is hosted by Bob Degus — Oscar voter, producer of Pleasantville, producer of two Oscar-nominated short films, and 30-year member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.---Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
-
-3
Why I'm Here: 40 Years, 3,000 Films, and What I Want to Give You
Episode 1: There's a moment I've never forgotten. A screening room full of Academy voters, all of us silently rooting for the same film — and then, in the last 30 seconds, the filmmaker made one mistake. The room let out a collective groan. The film was never nominated. And no one could tell the filmmaker why.That moment — about ten years ago — is the reason this podcast exists. After 40 years in Hollywood, producing Oscar-nominated short films and the feature Pleasantville, and watching more than 3,000 short films as an Oscar voter, I've learned exactly what separates a good short film from one that wins awards. I'm here to give that knowledge to you.In this first episode:How growing up in the shadow of Kodak — and a silent German film — set me on a path to HollywoodWhat I learned driving a world-class producer around New York City (and not talking)How Chanticleer Films used short films to launch careers — and generated 11 Oscar nominations along the wayWhat it actually feels like inside an Academy screening room, and how the voting process worksWhy the films voters remember are the ones that win — and what that means for your filmFor the companion piece — original writing that goes deeper into the most important idea from this episode — visit hollywoodfilmcoach.substack.com.Hollywood Film Coach Music Theme:Rise Of LegendsProduced by Sascha EndeLink: https://ende.app/en/song/12192-rise-of-legendsLicensed under CC BY 4.0
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
A multi-episode masterclass in award-winning short filmmaking — from an Oscar voter who has watched more than 3,000 of them. The gap between a good short film and an award-winning one is smaller than you think. Host Bob Degus — Oscar voter, producer of Pleasantville, and 30-year Academy member — is here to help you close it.
HOSTED BY
Bob Degus
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...