It began, as many impartial movies do, with a room filled with concepts and no ensures.
The BFI-supported pitching session wasn’t nearly discovering a powerful idea — it was about discovering folks. Individuals keen to guess on themselves. Amongst dozens of hopefuls, what emerged wasn’t only a undertaking, however a workforce: administrators, writers, editors — uncooked, instinctive, digital-native storytellers who didn’t but have permission from the business, however didn’t want it.
That’s the place my journey with LifeHack, and as a producer, actually took form.
Not in a boardroom with a greenlight, however in a room the place expertise needed to show itself first.
Working alongside Timur Bekmambetov, whose affect has reshaped screen-based storytelling, my position was clear: discover the voices, construct the workforce, and create a pathway that didn’t depend on conventional gatekeeping or financing buildings. The consequence was LifeHack — a movie born not from a system, however from a technique of discovery.
The mannequin sounds easy, however it isn’t:
Discover the expertise.
Construct the proof.
Persuade somebody to take the danger.
Then do it once more.
From Thought to Proof
After the preliminary pitch, we moved rapidly — not in direction of a completed movie, however in direction of a proof of idea.
That is the place producing turns into one thing else totally. It’s not logistics or oversight — it’s perception. Sustained perception, usually with out validation. The workforce constructed the proof piece by piece and rapidly realised that screenlife isn’t a shortcut — it’s a fancy, extremely technical type of storytelling.
What we had been constructing wasn’t only a movie.
It was the event of a movie language rooted in first-person POV.
When that proof landed, one thing shifted.
Timur noticed it — not politely or cautiously, however with the instinctive recognition that skilled producers have when one thing genuinely works. That second — when somebody says “sure” — is every thing.
However it’s additionally only the start.
The Startup Mannequin of Filmmaking
Conventional movie financing didn’t apply right here. There was no established director, no business observe document, no security internet.
So I structured the undertaking otherwise — extra like a startup than a movie.
Every stage needed to justify the subsequent:
• Proof of idea
• Script
• Previsualisation
• Manufacturing
At each stage, the problem was the identical: convincing somebody to speculate and take the subsequent step.
The previsualisation turned the turning level. We constructed the whole movie earlier than we shot it — testing it, shaping it, proving not simply the concept, however the execution. How it could really feel. How it could transfer. How it could breathe.
That was the second the movie turned inevitable.
And nonetheless — it was removed from straightforward.
The Actual Work
There’s a false impression in filmmaking that when financing is in place, the toughest half is over.
It isn’t.
That’s when the actual work begins.
The shoot itself lasted simply two weeks — quick, intense, stripped again to its necessities. However the actual movie was in-built publish over greater than a 12 months.
That is the place producing turns into most seen. Not simply managing timelines, however holding every thing collectively — creatively, emotionally, virtually — by a course of that’s, by its nature, exhausting.
Impartial filmmaking shouldn’t be a straight line.
It’s a continuing negotiation:
Between ambition and limitation
Between imaginative and prescient and actuality
Between what you need to make
and what you may afford to make
As a rule, issues solely come collectively on the final doable second.
The eleventh Hour
That is the reality folks not often speak about.
In indie movie, the items not often fall into place early. They fall into place on the eleventh hour.
The composer found by probability in a pub.
Casting formed by intuition reasonably than course of.
Artistic options pushed by limitation reasonably than design.
These aren’t anomalies.
They’re the method.
Producing at this degree isn’t about controlling chaos — it’s about working inside it. Holding the movie shifting ahead with out a clear path. Holding folks motivated with out certainty. And holding perception within the undertaking lengthy earlier than anybody else sees it.
From Movie to Market
Making the movie is barely half the battle.
As soon as LifeHack was full, it entered a distinct world — {the marketplace}. And the foundations modified once more.
Irrespective of how robust the movie is,
regardless of how modern the format,
regardless of how related the story —
it comes down to 1 factor:
Can somebody promote it?
The SXSW premiere marked a turning level. It validated the movie creatively and positioned it on a global stage. However festivals should not the endgame — they’re the start of the subsequent section: gross sales, distribution, positioning.
At this stage, the position of the producer shifts once more — from constructing the movie to shaping how it’s seen.
A movie doesn’t exist in isolation.
It exists in how it’s understood.
The Closing Convincing
Impartial movie is constructed on perception.
At each stage, somebody must be satisfied:
That the concept works
That the workforce can ship
That the movie will discover its viewers
My journey with LifeHack has been outlined by that course of.
Discovering the workforce.
Creating the expertise.
Constructing the movie.
After which — convincing the world that it issues.
Even with a powerful inventive workforce, even with a transparent technique, it in the end comes down to 1 closing stage: the sale.
A gross sales agent who can stroll right into a room and safe not simply theatrical distribution, however SVOD platforms, model partnerships, and merchandising — constructing a multi-platform ecosystem that proves the movie’s business and cultural worth.
Understanding that panorama — what the movie is price, the place it could possibly reside, and the way it can journey — turned a important a part of my studying as a producer.
As a result of it’s not nearly getting the movie made.
It’s about the way you defend it.
Cautious negotiation.
Understanding which rights to retain.
Understanding the place to push, and the place to carry.
These selections form the lifetime of the movie far past manufacturing.
That shift — from making the movie to structuring its future — is what defines me as a breakthrough producer.
Breakthrough — and Past
My strategy — talent-led, development-driven, rooted in actual alternative reasonably than entry — displays a shift within the business. Away from conventional pathways and hierarchies, and in direction of discovery, experimentation, and new voices.
LifeHack isn’t only a movie.
It’s proof that there’s one other manner.
One the place you don’t await permission.
You construct the chance.
You discover the folks.
You make the movie.
After which — when every thing is on the road — you convey others into it.
The movie exists.
The viewers exists.
What stays is perception.
That’s the hustle.
Not chaos. Not probability — however a producer’s self-discipline. The power to align folks round one thing not but totally confirmed. To convey others in, to commit their time, vitality, and cash — figuring out there aren’t any ensures till the movie is bought and reaches its viewers.
Understanding that — and figuring out tips on how to navigate it — is the actual work.
As a result of in impartial movie, the job doesn’t finish when the movie is made.
It ends when it lands.
And getting it there — that’s the hustle.
Get your tickets to the thirty fourth Raindance Movie Pageant LifeHack screening right here.

BIFA-nominated breakthrough producer Joann Kushner is an award-winning filmmaker working on the forefront of Screenlife and modern digital storytelling. She was nominated for the British Impartial Movie Awards (BIFA) Breakthrough Producer award and for the LCR Awards for Excellence in TV and Movie, alongside profitable a BIMA Award for innovation in new expertise for movie.
A champion of rising expertise, she has constructed a powerful observe document creating and producing initiatives with first-time writers and administrators. Her current function LifeHack, a critically acclaimed Screenlife heist thriller, efficiently launched new inventive voices and premiered at South by Southwest (SXSW), incomes recognition for its daring use of digital-native filmmaking.
She is at the moment creating her second function in collaboration with Picture Nation Abu Dhabi and Movie Clinic Cairo. The undertaking, working titled You Ought to Discuss to Somebody, was found by a Center East accelerator programme targeted on figuring out and supporting rising regional filmmaking expertise.
She can also be creating a slate of initiatives together with TROLLS, a brand new Screenlife tech-thriller exploring cyber activism, on-line espionage, and digital conspiracy tradition.


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