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From Childhood Camcorder to Directorial Debut: Garrett Patten Rediscovers His Calling Behind the Camera
Hollywood

From Childhood Camcorder to Directorial Debut: Garrett Patten Rediscovers His Calling Behind the Camera

by jummy84 November 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The path to becoming a filmmaker rarely follows a straight line. For Garrett Patten, it started with his childhood Sony camcorder and love for creating. His path detoured through over a decade in the corporate world, but has now circled back to where it began. This time, however, with the seasoned perspective of someone who understands what he’s been missing.  

Patten’s early experiments were humble: two-minute shorts cobbled together on outdated Adobe editing software. But those amateur projects planted the seeds to keep him rooted in filmmaking. He surrounded himself with fellow creatives and film students while studying at the University of Southern California. He had a successful run of careers outside of the industry, but knew his heart yearned to go back to what he’s always loved doing most.

“All in all, I love filmmaking in every form writing, directing, acting, editing,” Patten reflects. “It’s a complete expression of creativity, collaboration, and truth.”

That reunion with film required strategic reentry. Rather than rushing behind the camera, Patten approached his return as a producer, working alongside talented directors on projects including “Bandit” and “Die Alone.” The experience gave him an insider’s look into the logistics and artistry of directing. He then deepened his craft at Ivana Chubbuck’s renowned acting school, initially seeking to better direct actors but discovering an unexpected passion for performance itself.

Now, Patten brings both perspectives as director and actor to his debut short film “Self Custody,” co-directed with Fernando Ferro and written by Daniel McCann. The suspense thriller stars Odette Annable, Michael Monks, and UFC champion Henry Cejudo in a story exploring redemption, technology, and the devastating price of lost access in the digital age.

The premise emerged from the startling reality that an estimated 30 to 40 percent of all Bitcoin has been lost or stolen permanently. “The idea that someone could hold a fortune worth hundreds of millions of dollars on a single drive, with no backup, no bank, no safety net,” Patten explains. “It’s complete self-reliance but also complete isolation.” Often drawing from this balance of reliance and independence with his characters and story.

That duality extends to the film’s title, which operates on two levels. Beyond the cryptocurrency concept, “Self Custody” also describes the psychological imprisonment of being trapped within one’s own mind. “Both meanings mirror my character’s journey,” Patten notes. “He’s someone searching for control and in the process, he becomes his own prisoner. The title reflects that tension between freedom and isolation, power and loss.”

Patten’s preparation process involved months of living inside his character’s world, breaking down objectives, obstacles, and emotional triggers. “To get into that headspace, I drew from moments in my own life. It’s a process of letting go of yourself and allowing the character to take over,” he explains. The intensity of that immersion often left him mentally drained on set, but he views that exhaustion as evidence of full commitment. “When you fully surrender to the role, that’s when it starts to feel real. This role took me to emotional places I didn’t know I could go. When you fully commit to a character like this, it strips away a lot of what’s comfortable—and that’s where the real growth happens.”

Having completed post-production, “Self Custody” begins its film festival run this month. For Patten, not only is this project his debut as director and actor, but it represents rediscovering his childhood spark for filmmaking. This time, however, refined by years of experience and a hard-won understanding of what it means to be a versatile filmmaker.

Sometimes the longest route home teaches you the most about where you’re going.

 

November 14, 2025 0 comments
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'After the Hunt' Writer Nora Garrett: Ending Explained, and Changes
TV & Streaming

‘After the Hunt’ Writer Nora Garrett: Ending Explained, and Changes

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: The following interview contains spoilers for “After the Hunt,” including its ending.]

Over the course of nearly two hours, Julia Roberts’ character in Luca Guadagnino’s “After the Hunt” really goes through it. When the film, written by first-time screenwriter Nora Garrett, first opens, Roberts’ Yale philosophy professor Alma Imhoff is mostly concerned with a looming decision regarding her tenure at the Ivy League institution. Everything else in her life? It seems sort of great.

And then. As the film unspools, it simultaneously unravels nearly every element of Alma’s life. After a boozy evening at Alma’s, one of her favorite students (Ayo Edibiri as Maggie) accuses one of Alma’s favorite co-workers (Andrew Garfield as Hank) of a heinous crime. As we learn more about Alma’s own background, we watch her react toward both Maggie and Hank (and even her own husband, played by Michael Stuhlbarg) in increasingly alarming ways. Her health suffers. Her work suffers. She crumbles. And when Maggie, distraught over the ways in which her accusations have been weaponized against her, goes to Rolling Stone for a no-holds-barred interview that puts Alma in the crosshairs.

Jafar Panahi and Martin Scorsese

Well, for a little bit. The immediate aftermath of the publication of the interview sees Alma (who has already been denied her tenure, due to her stealing a fellow professor’s prescription pad to procure pain meds, oopsie) surrounded by angry Yale students, stressing her to the point she collapses. She ends up in the hospital, where she reveals the truth of both her ravaged health and a past love affair to her baffled husband, Frederik.

That would be a fine enough place to end the story, and in Garrett’s original screenplay, the final pages only extended that misery. In the draft of the screenplay she first sold to Imagine Entertainment before it landed on Guadagnino’s desk, Frederik actually leaves Alma, who resigns from Yale and then travels home to Sweden.

There, in the original script, she attempts to reconnect with the mother of her father’s deceased best friend (whom Alma had, by her own telling, a life-altering love affair with when she was just a young teenager). After the affair (or, let’s be clear, the abusive relationship) ended, a heartbroken Alma told everyone the man abused her, and even though she later told people she was lying. It eventually led to his suicide. But Alma has never gotten over the man, and considers him the great love of her life. His mother does not show up.

Alma also visits her aging parents and tearfully tells them about said great love affair. Her mom’s advice? No one ever gets over anything. How’s that for Swedish stoicism? Later, Alma returns home to New Haven, and testifies in support of Maggie. C’est fin.

'After The Hunt'
‘After The Hunt’Amazon MGM Studios

But in Guadagnino’s final film, none of that happens. Frederik doesn’t leave Alma. She doesn’t resign from Yale. She doesn’t go home to Sweden. And she sure as hell doesn’t testify for Maggie. Instead, after we see Alma in the hospital, the film jumps ahead five years, only to find that Alma, once the subject of mass derision (on campus and on the internet) is now the dean of Yale.

“So, when Luca first attached, he basically said, ‘OK, I love everything about this film except for the last 20 pages,’” Garrett told IndieWire during a recent interview. “And so, it was immediately right out in the open that he wanted the ending to shift. Partially, because when you think about the reality of how life works, Luca is very intentional and also very committed to truth and reality and verisimilitude.”

The way the director saw it, Garrett said, was that someone like Alma would never just give up, give in, roll over, and run away.

“The idea that someone like Alma, who had been searching her whole life for this, clawing her way towards this, making so many internal sacrifices for this thing, would give it up so easily, felt false to Luca,” Garrett said. “It felt like a very constructed character turn, as opposed to a holistic one. Looking at the world that we have … it’s really hard to let go of your identity, and it’s really hard to let go of everything that’s been bulwarking that identity, just because someone else tells you you have to. He felt like Alma was more of a fighter than that. And so, that’s how we began sort of reconstructing the ending of the film.”

It’s not just that Alma has risen to the highest echelons at Yale, but we also catch up with her on a day in which she’s seeing Maggie for the first time in many years. The pair meet for lunch at the same Indian buffet where we earlier saw Alma and Hank having a fraught interaction. Both women have changed — not just in terms of their careers, but their sartorial choices, which used to be very aligned, all natty blazers and button-up shirts — and they seem happy to see each other, if guarded about the whole thing. Maggie is surprised to hear that Alma is still with Frederik, and Alma marvels over Maggie’s giant engagement ring.

Still, Maggie is clear: She spent a long time waiting to see Alma really taken down a peg. And while that ending existed in Garrett’s original screenplay, it’s just not the case in the final film. Some people don’t get punished for their misdeeds, and they certainly don’t learn from their mistakes.

“I think we’re all being careful not to offer some sort of polemic to people,” the writer said. “But I do feel like, to me, that ending scene feels very much like, ‘Ah, right.’ That is sort of what happens sometimes. Maggie says to Alma, ‘I spent so long wishing for you to fail,’ and I think that the truth of life is that these things we think are going to be seismic and dramatic, they can be internally, but sometimes there’s not quite the one-to-one ratio of retribution that we think is going to be there.”

Amazon/MGM releases “After the Hunt” in limited theaters on Friday, October 10 with a wide release to follow on Friday, October 17.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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