In this episode, I sit down with filmmaker Wade Patterson to discuss his micro-budget feature
Death Cipher - a contained thriller shot in just 12 days for only $4,000.
Throughout the interview, Wade shares how multiple failed feature attempts led him to radically simplify his process, why he embraced a single-location concept shot in his own apartment, and how limitations ultimately became the film’s greatest creative advantage.
We also dive into the realities of making a feature with almost no money, wearing multiple hats as writer/director/cinematographer/editor, navigating festival rejection, finding distribution through Filmhub and Tubi, and much more:
- Why several failed feature attempts led to Death Cipher
- The mindset shift that led Wade to design a film around his resources
- Shooting the film over weekends and treating each room like a company move
- Creating props, puzzle elements, websites, and pre-shot video material
- How prioritizing actor comfort and a relaxed set environment improved the work
- What changed in post, including reshoots after early test screenings
- How Death Cipher landed on Tubi through Filmhub
Links from the show:Death Cipher - TubiDeath Cipher - InstagramWade Patterson - Instagram Sign up for my newsletter for exclusive filmmaking insight each Sunday