WHAT WENT WRONG - James McAvoy on California Schemin'
Episode Date: April 10, 2026This week, the one and only James McAvoy joins Chris and Lizzie to break down what went wrong - and very right - on his directorial debut, California Schemin’.The film follows two young Scottish rap...pers who get laughed out of the music industry… until they start pretending to be American. It’s a true story of ambition, delusion, and the blurry line between reinvention and outright fraud.Find out what drew McAvoy to the script, how he assembled the perfect cast, and what surprised him most about stepping behind the camera for the first time. Plus, discover the tricks he borrowed from some of the best directors he’s worked with (and which ones actually worked).Check out California Schemin’ in UK theaters starting today! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Guys, this is, this is kind of weird.
Is it weird?
I listen to you guys a lot.
Stop.
Here's what's weird for me.
When I was in college, a girl I dated, we saw Atonement together.
And I think we both realized we weren't for each other because I fell in love with Karen Knightley and she fell in love with you.
And we drew like drawings for each other.
We were weird artsy kids.
And I drew a drawing of you from Atonement for her.
It's a very weird time in my life.
So it's very weird to be talking to you.
right now. My natural curiosity just means I want to see the picture. It's like a full
shot of you in your like Dunkirk Army gear. Maybe she still has it. I don't know. I hope so.
We don't stay in touch. But anyway, Lizzie, please speak.
Uh, sure, gladly. Hi. Welcome. Hello.
Hi, cut, hot, hot, hi. Hello, dear listeners. And welcome back to a special bonus episode of
your favorite podcast full stop. What went right?
wrong, a podcast that just so happens to be about movies and how it's nearly impossible to make them,
let alone a good one, let alone your first movie, let alone the first movie you've made as a listener
of what went wrong. That's right. We are talking to...
Yeah, because that's the most important qualpire.
It's the most important decision our guest has ever made. We are talking to the incredible
actor, director, producer James McAvoy. James, thank you so much for listening to the show.
and thank you for being here today to talk about your incredible directorial debut,
California Schemin, a movie that I watched and loved,
and then also was like, come on, he's good looking, he's a great director, he's a great actor,
like this kind of, in a Hollywood's contracting.
There are not a lot of directing jobs around, and here comes this.
New guy taking my directing jobs.
It's an incredible accomplishment.
We're so excited to have you on the show.
Thank you for joining us.
Thank you so much for having me, guys.
I am a massive fan of the pod, as people sometimes call it.
I always feel it's slightly reductive, so I'm going to call it the podcast.
Yeah, I've been listening to you guys for ever since I started editing California scheming,
and I just needed something to get me out of the movie and out of my head about movies.
And my editor, Joe Sawyer, was like, you need to listen to more movie stuff.
And he put me on to you guys, and I, like, railed through you guys, cycling to
from work every day. I just went through everything. Yeah, I love it. I love it. Thank you guys
are great. I appreciate it. I'm thrilled to hear that. I'm also terrified because I'm always like,
do the people that we're talking about listen to this podcast, obviously we haven't covered you at all
yet or anything you've done, but it is an honor. And I'm going to out you, James, as one of our
full stop supporters. I am. I am. It's the real one. Yeah, no, I was like,
I just love what you guys did so much.
I was like, I'm going to support.
I'm going to support.
That's it.
That's it.
I'm doing it.
And a fit of economic, an economic flourish.
I decided to become a full stop supporter.
Well, you're the best.
We really appreciate it, but we are very excited to talk about California scheming.
We got to watch it.
We both really loved it.
We immediately texted each other afterwards and we're like, it's so good.
Oh, thank you.
Awkward, right?
If you don't like it and I'm like coming on the show.
Well, the first thing we texted was,
thank God it's good because it would have been like so the lighting is great let's talk about
no dude we got a distributor that I had worked with in the past on a movie like 10 years ago
who really wanted to do California scheming um like a year before we started shooting
wanted to put in money up front and be the UK distributor real good like go like
got the story was well into it. Anyway, we didn't end up going with them because we got,
we got more, we got offered a bigger fee from Studio Canal, UK, who've been incredible and
great collaborators. But I was doing my, I was going through the edit and we were, I screened
at an incredible amount of times to colleagues and people in the industry and kind of didn't
really care. And the last time, we were two days out from the edit, closing, locking it,
and I thought, I just need to show it to as many people as possible. And we didn't,
didn't have time to fill it with non-industry people.
So I was like, anybody you know.
And it was like, it was crazy.
It was James Samuel.
It was actors.
It was Sharon Horgan.
Yes.
It was like Trudy Stiler was there.
Oh my God.
It was like industry people who have won awards and shit.
Anyway, yeah, he came.
The guy who wanted to be in, but couldn't come in.
Anyway, he watched it.
I'm two days out of the edit.
I'm two days out of locking it.
And we go, we need to go and have a cup of tea with them afterwards.
We sit down and have a cup of tea and go, what do you think?
He's like, yeah, yeah, there's a film in there.
There's a film in there.
And you're like, oh, oh, oh, shit.
With two days left in the edit.
Oh, man.
Yeah, I know, I know.
And you're like, you're kind of going, I think there's personal stuff here.
Maybe it's that.
And luckily, we tested the film up to the wazoo, and we were scored in really high.
And we knew audiences laughed at all the right points, cried at all the right points and on.
So we were like, we knew it worked.
But I was like, ooh, it was exactly what you're saying.
So the lighting.
Wow.
Before we get too deep into it, can you give listeners just the logline of what California
Schemin is about?
Oh, yeah, because I guess we don't have an IMDB logline yet, do we?
Let me see, because I have your page up here.
You do.
You do have an IMDB logline.
Okay, we're going to do it.
Do the thing.
You've got to do the IMDB logline.
You've got to see, as always.
As always, here's the IMDB logline.
Two Scottish lads from Dundee, con the music,
by pretending to be an established Californian rap duo,
bagging a record deal and appearing on MTV until their scam unraveled.
Yeah.
Yeah, pretty good.
So basically, you've got two extremely talented Scottish rappers, right?
And that just makes people laugh outside of Scotland.
I'm not saying that still happens.
I'm not saying it would happen today, but I don't see many Scottish rappers kicking
it in the charts at the moment.
And they went down to London.
and they did a big huge open edition for a major record label
who shall remain nameless.
And they got laughed out of the room.
They asked, like, what do you want?
They were like, basically listed off a bunch of American rappers.
And they went, cool, we'll do that.
And they re-recorded all their music in American accents.
And then the same record label gave them a deal
just for simply changing their accents
and pretending to be an established rap duo.
They created a whole backstory about knowing D-12,
known at Eminem and all that,
who they then later had to support
live on stage. And they styled it out.
Really,
it sounds like a kind of great success story
about two people trying to game the system.
It's also a story about integrity and authenticity.
The lifeblood of hip-hop music as well,
I might add, as well as just something
that we all need to walk through our lives with.
And they paid a price.
And I think, you know, to get where you want to get in life,
you can sacrifice whatever you want,
but you're going to have to look at yourself
in the middle of one day and pay the bill,
and you might not have enough change in your pocket to do that,
and these guys didn't,
and they pay a pretty hefty price because of it.
But, yeah, that's ultimately the story.
Well, it's set up so effectively
the way that you guys have crafted it,
so they arc from Scottish pride
to internalizing the, you know,
sort of shame that seems to be projected on them
from the industry at the end.
And I loved that the way that the two characters, Gavin and Billy, kind of orbit around one another by the end of the film.
And they reverse positions in a lot of ways.
And we talk a lot on the show about this idea that like your flaws are your style, right?
The thing that other people perceive will hold you back will actually be the thing when you do succeed that makes you distinct from everybody else.
And like what you're talking about with what they sacrifice, I love how by the end, it's pointed out by Tessa, their manager, that they've given.
not the one thing that actually would have set them apart, that gave them their voice to begin
with, and made them different from D12 or the Beastie Boys, or, you know what I mean,
whoever that they were, like, sort of emulating at the time. And it is so tragic.
I have to say, that was one of my favorite scenes in the entire movie. And I really loved
Rebecca Merle, who plays Tessa. So good. And I was just so struck by that moment, especially to
have that character be a woman and to be a woman of color, I thought was really brilliant,
because something this movie does so well is it shows the collateral damage of them, you know,
making this decision to essentially fake it.
And she is kind of that collateral damage.
And it hit me so hard when she's like, you did one audition?
Like, you did one audition and you thought that they should pick you based on one audition?
And it's just, you didn't have to, you know, you didn't have to change yourself.
You could have kept trying.
You could have kept pushing.
really loved it. It's a lovely tight hour in 45 minutes. So first of all, thank you for that.
Listen, man, my whole purpose for making a film was basically to try and increase the quota of 90-minute
movies that get made. And that was my initial thing. I wanted to be 90 minutes. My director's cut,
my first pass, whatever many weeks, six weeks or something like, was 89 minutes. And I was like,
nailed it, right? And my editor and I, Joe, were like, nailed it, right? And, uh, and I, and I, Joe were like,
nailed it right and and then we showed it to like 12 people and they were all like
yeah I'm talking too fast it's too fast you're like oh shit we need to slow it down and I've
literally there's only one scene that I shot that isn't in the movie and even that is in the
movie I just play it MOS and yeah it ended up being an hour and 45 but yeah I wanted to make it
tight and have momentum and I wanted it to be a movie I'm making an independent movie
independent cinema in a part of the world that usually is
about unemployment and drug abuse and, I don't know, council states and things like that,
which is where I'm from. I'm from these schemes, these council schemes or projects, as you guys
call them. And you just don't usually get to make a movie, whatever the semantics behind
movie as opposed to film or I wanted to make a movie. And for that, I had to have momentum.
And it had to be not too long. So yeah, we did a lot of work in developing the script.
It has great momentum. Yes, it does. And it's a great point that we talk about, which is
sometimes you cut it so short that actually feels longer.
You know, like you need a pace that people can understand and sit in and enjoy.
And you very clearly establish that with this movie.
It just hums along.
Kudos to your editor.
Part of my problem as a director, as a first-time director, is I finally got to do what I like as an actor,
which is pick up your cues, if you know what I mean by that.
Like, not too much pausing acting, not too much breathing in between the lines.
really make it snappy
because I think sometimes
when you leave space between the lines
which you are often asked to do as an actor
so that the space to edit and the sound is protected
you lose energy between the actors
which is ultimately what you're trying to capture
you're trying to capture the magic that is in the space
between the two people
the thing that you both create together
and sometimes you get in the way of the momentum
line to line beat to beat
and you mess up anyway
I was like come on guys like
rapid, rapid, like riff off each other, riff off each other.
And then I get a film that's running too quick.
And I'm like, oh, God, we need to slow it down.
And then the editor was looking at me going like,
you directed them to be really fast.
There's not a lot of breathing space,
even in the material that we have to edit with.
So we really had to get creative and mine stuff from bad takes
and takes where the camera wasn't good.
And my DP, James Rhodes, who did an amazing job,
great background.
in live musical performance photography.
Which makes sense for this movie.
Yeah, right.
He has not thanked me a couple of times
for some of the shots that I've been in.
He's like, you took that take.
It was like, that's the longest.
Like, literally just trying to stretch the film at times
because it was playing so fast, it felt slow, like you say, Chris.
Can you walk us through, like,
how you found this project
and how you knew that this was the one
that you wanted to make your directorial debut with?
I wasn't necessarily certain
that I needed to make a Scottish.
film as my first. I was pretty sure I wanted to make an entertaining movie about people from
lower, lower income backgrounds, whatever that was in the world. And when I said I wanted to be a
director, I was in the very fortunate position as an actor of, you know, some success over the last
30 years that when I said I wanted to be a director, I got offered scripts and that's a really
privileged position to be in I'm aware. However, as an actor who's only played four or five Scottish roles,
it was interesting to me that the scripts I got offered were kind of poverty porn about working class Scottish council estates
and I was like I definitely want to make them about people in that position but my life grown up in a council estate or a scheme was full of possibility and adventure and big sky like huge sky and epic battle and standoff in peril and flight and
terror and sex.
A movie. I grew up in the teen...
I know, I know, a movie.
I grew up in the teenage pregnancy capsule of Europe.
And then I get these scripts that are about, you know, abuse, domestic, drug, alcohol, physical, sexual.
And it's just like, what the fuck.
And then I finally got this.
And it was also about...
It was a chance to entertain as well as being about the social realities of what it's like to be
from somewhere like that.
Without ignoring it,
it still tried to grab the audience
and make them laugh and make them smile
and make them dream.
And then at the same time,
honoured the fact that it ended pretty badly
for these ways, you know?
I mean, if anything,
it's so illustrative of,
I think, what some of those other movies
were maybe trying to convey
without being a bummer necessarily,
because the fact that all they had to change
to get the record contract was their accent
should really tell you everything you need to know
about, you know,
the way that that culture, I mean, obviously we're American,
but I'm assuming the way that that culture was sort of viewed
by other parts of the UK, at least.
I mean, I would say, I'm not here to complain
because I don't think it helps.
And instead, I made a movie that makes people laugh
and hopefully shows light on what is actually happening.
The reason I put the big mural of train spotting in the movie
is because, not just because of the kind of iconic line
that Renton says in that,
when he says it's shite being Scottish,
it was to make people remember that,
like, it's 30 years since that film was made.
And potentially the best Scottish film ever made, right?
I think it's an incredible work of art
and entertaining, and it's a movie.
It's not just a film, it's an African movie.
And what have we had since then?
And it's a country of six million people.
I know we're not like 250 like you guys
but like 6 million people
we should have made more than a handful of movies in that time
thank God for I swear last year
I made a film with John S. Baird called Filth
but 13 years ago there's been other stuff
in between then I'm not just saying that that's all we got
but people say to me like
oh no it's terrible how it used to be and I go like
name me five Scottish movies in the last five years
and you go that's a whole and it's not just a problem for Scotland
this is a problem for all regions
of Great Britain outside of the certain parts
of society that are allowed to have stories told about them.
And it's the same story all the world over.
Certain regions and certain echelons of society
are allowed to have stories told about them.
And the rest kind of, maybe because there's a doubt over recoupment
at the box office don't get the opportunity.
And art is here, not just for recruitment,
art is here so that we human beings can have an experience reflected
and we can see ourselves.
And so all parts of society need to be reflected.
And that's all colors, all genders, all creeds, all sexuality, all everybody.
And it's just really sad that you walk into your room with the same song, but with a different accent and you get a record deal.
But you walk into the room with your own accent with the same song and you get laughed out the room.
That just illustrates it right there, you know.
So not try to complain about it because I don't think it helps the situation.
But yeah.
I have to ask you about that, you and McGregor mural.
I had several questions about it.
First of all...
It was a strong. It was a bold choice.
I love it.
As soon as I saw it, I was locked into this movie.
Does he know, has he seen the movie?
Does he know that it's in it?
I don't think he's seen the film.
He was on the Graham Norton show.
And Graham said, like, oh, you've popped up in Glasgow.
Do you know this mural?
And he looks at the mural on the Graham Norton show and goes like, oh, wow, that's amazing.
I don't think anybody realized that we...
had put it there.
Yeah.
And it was, I was looking for something that illustrated something culturally significant
about Scotland that everybody can recognise.
And then that we could later reveal had a negative connotation when the bus moves away.
Yeah.
And it was quite a bold move in that I'm in my directorial debut in the first two minutes
of the film, I'm making the audience remember the greatest Scottish film ever made.
And I was like, honestly, this is potentially quite a treacherous move here, self-sabotage.
That's why I removed the Casablanca references from the first movie I did right at the beginning.
But yeah.
We got to ask, so the casting, like it's been said anywhere from what, I don't know, 75% to 90% of casting.
Depending on who you asked, 90% of a director's job is casting, right?
Like your cast is your movie.
And your cast is amazing in this movie.
They're pitch perfect, right?
And there's a...
God, they look so much like them too.
They do.
When you show the real footage at the end, I was like, oh, my God.
I didn't realize I had seen...
Samuel Bottomley before.
Yeah.
And way back in Tyrannosaur from like 2011, which I forgot about.
That's a great film.
It's an amazing movie.
You guys should go see it.
He is so good.
I really was blown away.
Can you tell us a little bit about the search?
How did you feel when you found?
I mean, I can't imagine.
Like, these are real people that you're basing this on.
As we mentioned, you show footage at the end of the film.
They look like them.
They are great performers.
I love their accent.
Like the American accents they do.
The code switching is crazy.
It's so good.
Yeah.
So how did you find? What was that process like?
It was an interesting process. It was quite long. We started casting quite early because, you know, I've said this quite a few times.
If we were making this film a bit to kids in Albuquerque or something like that, doing something similar, I'd have a plethora of young actors who'd led movies and probably could finance a movie.
It's a certain level anyway. Because my country doesn't produce movies. I'm looking for complete unknowns, people who have done hardly any work.
that age group, you know.
Seamus, this was his, he hadn't done a professional gig, but when I hired him, he had done
one after, by the time we made the movie, he had done one gig.
Lucy had done one gig.
Sam had been working since he was like five years old.
We started early, we saw a lot of people, saw a ton of people, and we did a lot of
chemistry cast and switching actors with access, because ultimately, there's four distinct
main characters in the film, but the film really follows a relationship.
The stakes of the film are a relationship
and whether the relationship makes it or not.
Whether they get caught or not,
it doesn't really matter.
It's whether the relationship will make it or not.
So chemistry was more important than individual actor being great.
I got lucky in that the first person I ever auditioned
in my life as a director was Samuel Bottomley.
Wow.
And I was like, and he came in with the chin strap
and he just looked like Billy so much,
but also he's the first person I saw.
Billy was the most difficult part to cast
because, well, Gavin's role
is more troubled and
I guess there's more handholds
for an actor to get into the role of Gavin.
He's got more inner turmoil, he's got more
isms, he's got more
this, that and the next thing going on.
Actors came in knowing what to do with that role.
So it was really about who's the best
at executing it and Seamus was
unbelievable. Billy
has to be happy. Billy has
to be capable of happiness and Billy has to
relaxed. Billy's got to be a movie star.
And
you can't, you can't
action that. You can't check off that.
You can't unit beats and ejected that.
You can't learn that. You can't technique
that. You can't act
that. You just got to be that.
And Sam's just
like, chill as fuck
and so cool
and capable of being
authentically himself.
And so he was the
first person I saw. And I thought
if I can get him in the film with Seamus
and their chemistry works were going to be great.
But we didn't know that that was going to work.
So we did a whole big mix-up,
lots of different actors with lots of different people.
Seamus made everybody else better.
Sam made everybody else better when they worked with them.
They lifted people up around them.
There was lots of people who were really good,
just not necessarily right.
And then I put them both together,
and they kind of cancelled each other out,
and they were both really shit for the first take.
And I was like,
oh this is disaster this is awful
these are my guys
these are the ones that I know can bring it
home and they're not doing it
and they were just too busy watching each other
because they both like game-recognized
game or something like that
and then I was like okay
what do I do and
I went I guess what we do
is we go again
yeah that's what we'll do we'll go again
you know the classic the brilliant idea
director intervenes we'll go again
and so we went
try again.
And yeah, no, I know.
It was perfect.
Let's go again.
And they just got out of their own way.
They stopped looking at each other.
They stopped admiring each other.
And they just played.
And they were brilliant.
They were so, so good.
But the weird thing is that, like,
it's the same is true with Lucy as well.
Lucy, who plays Mary.
She's the first tape I saw for anyone.
She just happened to be the first in line of all the tapes that I saw.
And we saw twice in person as well.
But I was like, it's her.
It's going to be hard.
Yeah, she's really lovely.
I don't know if that's just like biased
because it's the first person I saw,
but she is exceptional.
She's really good.
And she's brilliant in the Testaments as well.
So, yeah, and then actually,
I say Billy was the hardest part to cast.
Tessa was the hardest part to cast, actually,
because Tessa was the only role that we invented.
Tessa was originally a sort of antagonist.
She was one of the managers from the label
who was like onto them and trying to figure them out.
She took against their kind of juvenile chauvinanism.
and juvenile sort of misogynistic kind of humor at times,
quite rightly so, and sniffed the rat,
and she kind of went after them,
and she was exposing them and looking for their passports and all that.
I was like, it doesn't, the threat and the drama of,
are they going to get caught or not?
I'm just not interested in.
It's just a relationship and whether it makes the difference.
So I was like, so what happens to that character of Amy?
And I was like, she should be an ally who's also getting screwed over
and also a representative of the culture that they've approached,
created.
Yeah.
So I was like, great, I've nailed it.
I've written a great part.
And it's really responsible because I'm like,
we've got a movie about two white guys that are appropriate in black music.
And here I have somebody from the black community who's like a supporter of and lover
of that culture who's also getting fucked over.
That makes sense.
Great.
We've written a really good part.
And then nobody could, every actor we saw was just like, nobody gets this.
What is it going on?
To the point when I was like talking to the writer.
Elaine, Gracie, who's amazing, and going, have we written a shit part?
A couple of people could do it, but they were too old, or they were the wrong age or
the wrong kind of chemistry.
And then finally, Rebecca came in and just smashed it out of the park and we were really,
really lucky.
So casting was long, but ultimately it ended up going for pretty much the first instinct.
And I don't know if that's a lesson for the future or not.
Maybe you learn to trust yourself, right?
Because it's your first time.
So you're thinking like, no way I nailed it on the first tape.
And then now going forward, you can just say, yeah, we nailed it on the first tape.
Tell you what, though, I don't know how you feel, but like sometimes I've definitely felt this as an actor auditioning for directors.
I'm being used to help you figure out whether this is a good scene or not.
Yeah, I'm like, well, this scene doesn't work.
Yeah, totally.
Like, we workshopped a lot of the scripts.
Yeah, turns out that line is unsayable outside of my head.
So I'm going to cut it from my stupid movie.
Yeah.
No, it's important.
It is like, as a director, I think one of the most important things you can do is look to your cast and say like, they're smart.
They're very good at what they do.
Have I given them an impossible task, basically?
Yeah.
And on that really quickly, you've worked with an incredible array of directors.
And so coming to your first movie, was there anything that you brought here where you thought, man, I loved what this director did?
You don't have to name names.
Or, you know, I really don't want to do what this director did.
Please name names.
No, I'm just kidding.
I will, I will.
I will. I've absolutely ripped off.
John Baird and Danny Boyle
with the kind of sort of unfasible enthusiasm
and energy projection
even when you don't feel it
and you know they don't feel it all the time
but they commit even when the crew and the cast
are looking and you're going like,
I know you're not feeling this right now
you really appreciate the commitment and the effort
you know and I love that about them
I also think they've done incredible work
just that I would be lucky to emulate as well
but I've not tried to emulate their style or anything like that,
but that was something.
Joe Wright, who I did a tournament with that we talked about
before we started recording, Chris,
which is an interesting conversation that we might have to include.
I think we do.
Joe Wright did something that no director I've ever worked with
before or since has ever done.
And I did this every day on every scene
because it really galvanized for me, the crew,
and welcomed in the crew in a way that they don't always get,
which was,
rehearse it with the actors
and then you welcome the crew
in for the crew show
and you let them see it
and then you go
all right this is what the scene is to me
the scene is to me
connection
it's
it's funny at this bit
they have a moment of something
is beautiful and intangible
and we don't know whether it's going left or right
and then we undercut it with a bit of humour
or it's a bit of tragedy or whatever
I want the audience to feel this
and I want it to be snappy snappy snappy
snappy or I want it to be
breathey, breathey, breathey, breathey.
We're going to do this, this, this, and if we'll get time, we'll do this, right?
That's what we're all doing, guys.
Ready?
Break.
And it's like everybody just suddenly goes, I feel like a filmmaker today.
Because there's so much, like, chain of command sometimes on a film set that stops people feeling
like the part of it.
That term, hurry up and wait.
Everybody's, like, hurrying up to wait for their moment where they have to come in.
And I've been on films where the crew haven't even got the script.
They've not even read the script.
Not because they haven't chose to read it.
They've not been given it.
And, all right, maybe HODs have or something like that.
But yeah, so that was something that I've chosen to do and rip off from him.
I'd love to hear with the crew that I worked with said about this.
They might be like, yeah, we don't need that one.
Yeah, that was a real drag.
We just wanted to get a cup of tea and all that.
And then the other person that I completely ripped off was Jamie Lloyd.
I don't know if you're aware of Jamie Lloyd's work.
He's a theatre director, sort of was the only.
non-Fon-Fon-aribla. I think he's probably
slightly too old to be called that anymore.
Terrible infant in French for anybody who doesn't speak French.
I don't, but I know that that means.
And I've been working with him
for about 17 years.
And he's probably the most significant
director-actor-actor relationship I've ever
had. Watching him
change as a director and refine his process,
like he's doing less and less and less over the years,
not just for me because he's worked with me loads
and I've become more experienced, but with all the cats.
He's doing less in terms of acute, minute direction,
but he's doing so much in empowering the performer
and making you as a performer feel like
you're more important to me than the character.
As long as the story is being told,
I don't care whether your characterization has the right limp
or the right funny walk and the patch and the whatever.
It's like, I'm here for,
the audience are here.
here for the performer telling them the story because that's what we are we're not actors we're
not this this is my thing and forgive me if anybody disagrees me you're totally allowed to and
do your own thing and it's cool but we're not filmmakers we're not dps we're not boom operators
we're not actors we're not hair and makeup department we're not any of these things we are all
storytellers. And sometimes the craft becomes the end goal. Sometimes cinema becomes the end goal.
I'm here to make good cinema and you're not. You're here to tell a story well. And what I loved
about what Jamie has done with me and many casts that I've worked with with him is that when we walk
on stage, we feel like we are enough. And we are empowered. And whatever we bring from our lives
is what we are going to fire out through that on stage with him.
I try to do that with my cast as well.
And for a young cast, two of which were massively inexperienced,
I think that really helped.
So yeah, I will name check everybody I've stolen from.
Before we let you go, the last thing we have to ask you, of course,
is what went wrong?
If there was one thing you could share, I know I'm sure.
No, not just one thing.
Whatever you want to share.
I know we're at it.
We're close on time, but please, what went wrong?
Man.
So, oh, man, we had some pretty major, major, major stuff go wrong very early on.
And I actually can't talk about it because it might be litigious and all that stuff.
So it's really one day, years from now, I will come back and tell you all about it.
It is pretty wild.
It is pretty wild.
And the fact that we have this movie, the way, the way.
Wild West, the Dodge City of making independent cinema in Great Britain in Scotland,
where roughly five films get made every 50 years, is incredible that this film exists.
What went wrong?
There was one tiny scene in the film when it said,
Seamus's character, Gavin, skateboards, and stacks it and hurt himself, right?
We've got that scene in the film.
And I was like, do you know what?
He's a hip-hop guy.
a skater guy,
skater culture,
he should be skateboarding.
So I was like,
Seamus,
do you think you can get skateboarding
and take some lessons and stuff?
And I will pay for it and all that.
He gets to set,
he gets to the unit bait
or like the production office
three weeks before we start shooting.
I'm like,
so how have those skateboarding lessons been going?
He's like,
oh no, I've not been doing them, man.
Oh, mate.
All right, so I, like,
got them in a skate community
and I got them going, right?
And I only needed Shamis doing it.
Samuel Botten.
He goes, like,
what he's skateboarding in the film?
And I was like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's like, well, I'm skateboarding in the film then.
He's like, ah, I'm slightly worried we're a low-budget, independent movie.
They bond, the insurance company, like, then you're going to like this.
And he's like, I'm skateboarding on the film.
Like, all right, big man, no problem.
You go skateboarding.
Great.
They both get hard at it.
They're really making great progress in a week and a half before the movie gets started
before we roll.
Sam breaks his elbow.
Oh, no.
We have it on film.
we have it they were filming each other on iPhones and so we have it documented um the moment that he broke
his elbow and we were like oh gosh that happened so the only time you see sam um skateboarding in the
film is like the four days that we shot in london at the very end we shot almost entirely in glasgow
and none of the film is set in glasgow it's all set in dundee or london and that was the last
little bit he was able to skateboard you did you shot at the barrowlands right
Yeah, I mean, where the boys actually supported M&M and D12 was the Brixton Academy in London.
So we were running around Glasgow looking for a place that could double as a Brickson Academy.
And then ultimately we got to the Barilands, which cannot double as the Brickson Academy,
because it's so unique and so strange looking, it's got this big curved ceiling.
And we're just like, this is somewhere that D12 also played.
And we're like, well, why don't we have them just come here instead?
Yeah.
And we were able to fill it with 2,000 people.
Wow.
which is amazing.
We couldn't pay them to come.
Because that was going to cost us like
350, 400 grand,
which we just didn't have.
So we managed to put on a real gig
with a real band
and we got them to come
in naughty's sort of
hip-hop skater boy outfits.
And we said,
come for the real gig,
90 minutes of naughty's bangers
and stay for like two takes
of our boys.
They stayed,
the Glasgow crowd,
all 2,000 of them
stayed for like two ever.
and let me direct them and like they were amazing.
They were amazing.
Are you kidding?
I bet they were thrilled.
Oh, it was amazing.
It was like such a buzz.
There's a thing in Glasgow where at a gig, if they like you, they will chant, here we, here we, here we fucking go.
Here we, here we, here we fucking go.
Chapel Roan famously had one where they adapted it for chapel, chapel, chapel fucking Roan.
And when they did that for us, and when they did that for us,
unprompted I was like it's not accurate it wouldn't be back then it's only started in
the last 10 15 years but I was like that's got to go in the film it's such a slice of where I'm
from it's got to go in the film so we did that but the music in general and all the photography
for the music was like a real like I say like I'm not I'm weirdly not a fan of musicals or biopics
and it just made a musical biopic for my directorial debut and it wasn't until like eight weeks out in
prep that I was like, I've got to make a music film.
I was like, how am I going to do this?
And James Rhodes was exceptional, helping me conceptualise how we go from what looked like
a concert to also being inside their experience on stage as well.
And then the other thing about music is just trying to get the money together for a soundtrack,
which was ridiculous.
We had an amazing composer, Ben Rafferty, who did The Substance.
I may destroy you, I think.
You did that one.
I may destroy you. He did Dragonfly, which is an amazing film. I don't know if you've seen it with Brenda Blethen just recently.
And Andrea Rysbrough, terrifying domestic care films. You go to check out. It's an amazing hybrid film.
I've just made a film with the director called Faith with Erin Doherty. Anyway, he's a very talented guy.
But that guy, Ben Rafferti, put our soundtrack together in four weeks.
Wow.
I know. That's how slim the budge was.
That's a classic, what went wrong? The composer has no time.
That's the perfect. You did.
it you followed every tenant of the show he was amazing he was amazing like a real gentleman genius
and just like what the kind of person that the movie industry thrives on and also takes advantage
of right where it's like because you give him an impossible task and then he actually does it yeah the
idea that the show must go on is wonderful I live for that but I'm also abused because I live for that
yeah we all do yeah if the show doesn't always have to go on but
This is why I could never be a star
because I'm always like, the show can stop.
It can stop right here.
Yeah.
Literally, 99% of your crew and cast are show must go one people.
I know we have to let you go,
but is there anything else that we haven't talked about
or that you'd like to mention or plug before you get out of here?
I just want to give a shout out to Michael Menderson at Patriot Pictures,
who, when we encountered some serious issues,
came in and saved the date.
We've had lots of great partners financially,
but without him at that exact moment,
we would have gone under,
like a lot of British independent films,
just one day, two weeks into the shoot, do.
And so we're really lucky that we got this made.
Thank you so much.
Listen, as a fan of the podcast,
thank you so much for having me on.
It is weird talking to you live.
It's weird talking to you, too.
Yeah, it's a two-way street there, Mr. McAvoy.
Thank you so much for your time.
Seriously, like, just fucking congratulations.
Yes.
It's so good.
It's so good.
I can't see what, I'm sorry I can't stop swearing, but I can't wait to see what you do next.
It's so good.
What an accomplishment.
Just seriously.
Thanks, you guys.
Congratulations and thank you so much for being willing to talk to us.
We appreciate you, your art, your actual financial support of our show.
You're the absolute best.
You're a king.
Don't forget, guys, I paid for this.
I know.
Thank you for making it satisfying experience.
And we will be buying tickets to your movie.
That's right.
And the Oromoros continues.
We love you so much.
Thank you so much, James.
We appreciate you.
Thank you guys.
