In this episode, I sit down with Academy Award nominee and ASC Award-winner Curren Sheldon to discuss his gritty new narrative feature Beatdown – a boxing drama made for just $60,000.
Throughout the interview, Curren shares how his background in vérité documentary shaped the film’s style, why he cast real fighters and non-actors, and how they filmed key fight scenes inside a live event with 4,000 spectators.
We also dive into the practical realities of transitioning from documentary to narrative, self-financing a feature for under $60K, navigating today’s distribution landscape, and tons more:
- Why The Wrestler was a key stylistic reference for Beatdown
- The doc-to-narrative transition: what gets easier, what gets harder
- Using non-actors (real boxing personalities) without losing story control
- Shooting inside a real “Toughman” event with 4,000 extras and a tiny window to film
- How he sold two prior films to Netflix, and what it took to break through
- A practical cinematography mindset shift that instantly elevates visuals
This is Episode 268: How an Oscar-Nominated Filmmaker Shot a $60K Boxing Feature With Production Value
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Links from the show:
Beatdown – Full Film on YouTube
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Noam Kroll
Noam Kroll is an award-winning Los Angeles based filmmaker, and the founder of the boutique production house, Creative Rebellion. His work can be seen at international film festivals, on network television, and in various publications across the globe. Follow Noam on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook for more content like this!


