• Lawrie Brewster’s 10 Essential Tips for Surviving Post-Production Hell Without Bourbon!
    There he is… Horror Film Producer Lawrie Brewster with Cat Ears

    Ah, it’s a hard life for Lawrie Brewster… working the late-night shift doing sound post-production for Amicus ProductionsIn the Grip of Terror!

    Lawrie Brewster

    Lawrie Brewster’s full majesty is thus captured as he can be seen wearing Megan Tremethick’s Miss Mutter costume ears from her horror debut Spoiling You… and he has a cuddly pet cat, gifted by his remarkably talented producer-ninja-partner Sarah Daly!

    Lawrie Brewster’s 10 Rules for Working Late Without Bourbon

    This is to help all you folks working the post-production late shift beside me.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #1

    Always have a medium-sized bag of Marks & Spencer Cheesy Puffs by your side… or any middle-class equivalent. The extra cost for the class distinction of cheesy puff will help reduce any existential crisis you might feel while editing.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #2

    Keep a cuddly toy or plush (or “plushy”, as you Americans like to call them) on your desk. But make sure it doesn’t look too cheerful. Better yet, it should have a fairly judgemental expression, filled with subtle disdain. This will help create the sensation of working under the purview of management, increasing both your efficiency and anxiety.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #3

    Ensure that any available news sources focus on international conflict and American domestic politics. This can inspire a sense of impending doom which, by quickening your pulse rate, may increase your post-production performance.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #4

    Just to be on the safe side, make sure your background music playlist doesn’t include anything too cheerful, or you might work too quickly and escape the hopeless long haul. To ensure you lack the emotional strength to leave your chair, simply set up a playlist consisting of Kate Bush’s This Woman’s Work played on repeat. Forever. And. Ever.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #5

    You may also, in the background on an iPad or television, play the exploitative historical action series Spartacus: Blood and Sand… but make sure a very moral friend has edited out all the scenes that consist of naughty or violent bits. Just the talking. Talking. Nothing with Lucy Lawless either. Just the buff guys talking about their feelings. Forever. And. Ever.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #6

    Reflect on your life in the ’90s… especially if you were a young man trying to load a naughty picture on the internet. Remember not the seconds… but the minutes it might take to load via a dial-up modem. Then remember… that was still faster than the post-production work you’re doing now.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #7

    When considering your own feelings, remember that the remorseless software staring back at you with obsidian-black, unblinking eyes can stay on forever… can work forever… and is probably mocking you with its heartless gaze, as you scramble about your computer desk in the vain hope of finding the last remaining chocolate snack or biscuit.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #8

    When you go to the loo, make sure you bring your mobile with you, so that you cannot enjoy even the briefest moment of emotional escape. For too long… before the advent of the mobile, going to the toilet provided a form of brief relief from the emotional tornado that is modern life. No escape for you. Back to work!


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #9

    Make lots of black coffee… obviously to be poured without milk or any other vain milk substitute. Then just stare at it… and the clock… wondering whether you should stay up as late as you must to get your work done. The answer is yes. You must! Forever. And. Ever.


    Lawrie Brewster Rule #10

    Ensure that, while on a post-production marathon, your house is stocked with nothing but chocolate, biscuits, cheesy puffs, black coffee, bourbon, cola zero… and perhaps bread. Anything else will only give your body hope. And we can’t have that during the post-production process, can we?

    About Lawrie Brewster
    Lawrie Brewster - Official Website

    Lawrie Brewster is a veteran horror film producer with 15 years of experience. Lawrie Brewster leads Hex Studios, serves as president of Amicus Productions, and runs the British Horror Studio project in collaboration with filmmakers from around the world.

    You can also follow Lawrie Brewster on his Official Website at www.lawriebrewster.com
    Lawrie Brewster has also recently produced a series of fascinating articles, offering professional insights into the state of independent film distribution, along with five hot tips for success aimed at aspiring film producers.

    Earlier posts cover the launch of LawrieBrewster.com, his professional tips, and a recent outting with his dad Kiwi Neil for some cake!

  • Psst… Lawrie Brewster Shares 5 Essential Tips for Indie Film Success!
    This Sunday, I, Lawrie Brewster, was sat wearing my Teddy Ruxpin kimono and ventured my thoughts onto the past, where I might, in a world of fantasy, offer my younger self filmmaking advice that could have spared me from some of the trials and tribulations I experienced getting to where I am now.

    Fifteen years of misadventure, with plenty of adventure along the way. But to have experienced more of the good parts and less of the bad… that’s something I really wish I could have told the younger Lawrie Brewster.

    The idea to produce an epic article came to me while I was out nomming cakes with my dad, known as Kiwi Neil.

    The idea to produce an epic article came to me while I was out nomming cakes with my dad, known as Kiwi Neil.

    So, what did Lawrie Brewster do after eating a novel-sized chocolate cake with Kiwi Neil, in what was a rare event in Scotland (a sunny day)?

    I sat down and got to work. Before I knew it, my article for Amicus Horror was already 3,000 words long. But I’m glad I produced it.

    It felt like ol’ Lawrie Brewster had emptied something of his soul, and in doing so, provided some morsels of recollection that might help others too.

    That’s really what I hope to achieve now as a film producer. Apart from making great indie horror films (sorry, passable indie horror films), I want to help others along the journey.

    Because while I succeeded, more or less, thanks to the support of others in the Hex Studios and British Horror Studio team, others do not. Others need help.

    I want to be that help.

    So, be sure to visit my epic article, and take some comfort that whatever your struggles may be in the film industry… you are not alone.

    And… where there is cake… there is hope.

    About Lawrie Brewster

    Lawrie Brewster is a veteran horror film producer with 15 years of experience. Lawrie Brewster leads Hex Studios, serves as president of Amicus Productions, and runs the British Horror Studio project in collaboration with filmmakers from around the world.

    You can also follow Lawrie Brewster on his Official Website at www.lawriebrewster.com
  • Why Indie Horror Needs a New Path

    Over the past 15 years, I’ve witnessed the landscape of independent filmmaking change dramatically… particularly within the horror genre.

    At first, like many, I believed in the idea of “the marketplace” that if you made a great film, it would find its way to an audience through the traditional system of sales agents, festivals, and distributors.

    But hard lessons, real-world experience, and the challenges of today’s streaming landscape have shown me that this system is broken. That’s why I’ve written a deeper, more personal statement over on the Amicus Horror website:

    👉 Read my full thoughts here

    In that piece, I share what led to the strategic shift at Hex Studios, the decline of traditional indie film markets, and why I now believe the only future for independent horror lies in artists building their own ecosystems.

    I hope it resonates with fellow filmmakers and horror fans alike. We can’t wait for permission anymore… we have to create it ourselves… and we shall with the British Horror Studio.

    Lawrie Brewster

  • Lawrie Brewster Launches Official Website

    I, Lawrie Brewster am really delighted to announce the launch of lawriebrewster.com, which will allow me to lend a personal perspective on the goings-on of my film career and life, with the opportunity to share personal and insightful experiences that I hope will provide inspiration, guidance and well… I said ‘hope’ already, right?

    Hope is an important word, and an important feeling to nurture in the creative industries, especially among those who aspire to become independent filmmakers. I mean, even for veterans like myself, who’ve served as film producers for fifteen years now, it is a resource that must be protected and spent carefully; for the preservation of all those midnight post-production sessions and early morning meetings.

    Some of you may be familiar with Lawrie Brewster, the director of Lord of Tears, and the co-creator of the Owlman, alongside Irish film producer and creative genius Sarah Daly. With Lord of Tears, and films such as The Unkindness of Ravens, and more recently our ‘80s-inspired The Slave and the Sorcerer, I’ve worked principally as a director and producer with Hex Studios.

    The venerable Owlman from Lord of Tears is perhaps our most popular IP creation at Hex Studios!

    This was our first horror film company, and it is now joined by the newly revived Amicus Productions, for which I am proud to serve as President, on behalf of the Subotsky Estate of the late Amicus founder Milton Subotsky. Suffice to say, it’s an honour to follow in the footsteps of the man who brought us Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors, or my personal Amicus favourite, Asylum.

    With those companies, and with a charity operated by Sarah Daly, we founded the British Horror Studio as an inspirational community and horror studio that comprises all those companies and organisations as partners.

    Here they are… some of our beloved British Horror Studio community, ready to eat KitKats and make movies.

    The British Horror Studio represents my greatest passion at the moment because it presents an opportunity to give back to the generations that follow me, who need guidance, both in terms of filmmaking and emotional support. After all, the world is just a little more brutal now.

    That’s not to say that older folks aren’t welcome too, and in fairness, the British Horror Studio stands as a positive beacon for folks of all sorts. Even those who put pineapple on pizza.

    In my articles, I might write about passing events, film news, or present highlights from the news published on the British Horror Studio Patreon, or our official news website, Amicus Horror. This website is something of an intimate space, and the opinions I express here will not represent those of the British Horror Studio, Hex Studios, Amicus Productions, or anything else, but my tawdry self.

    A Path from Outsider to Filmmaker

    Today, I released a very intimate article, the first of several that track how my career began. I always hate how so many filmmakers conceal the more difficult parts of their early career journeys, which, if we’re being honest, is the information that’s most useful to those staring from afar, wondering how the heck they can begin a life in film.

    Lawrie Brewster
    Lawrie Brewster looking inquisitively at Art Director Caz’s sides scream a competent filmmaker!

    So in my article, I began writing about my youth… starting with my childhood, my misadventures at school, and the perilous, ever-winding journey that eventually led me to begin my education in film (which did not come about through any institution). I wrote about how Sarah Daly and I met, and how we began producing films with Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Channing Tatum, which screened at Sundance and SXSW.

    Get ready for some retro cringe with Lawrie Brewster and the man who would become my cinematographer!

    You can read the first part of The Journey of Lawrie Brewster right here.

    The BHS Community Votes!

    In the meantime, the British Horror Studio community on Patreon, which, incidentally, is free to join (though goodness knows we put any contributions to good use), has begun… let me draw some breath.

    It has begun to vote on a proposed licensing agreement that will allow us to take the next step in a project we’ve developed with members called The Spooky Tales, whereby folks in the community submitted short stories, with the winning entries being adapted into narrated horror shorts.

    The agreement we’ve proposed for vote is non-commercial and non-exclusive, but as always, we operate within the BHS in a completely transparent way. The benefit of joining the Patreon is that you actually get to become a part of a horror film studio, with a level of access like nothing you’ll experience outside of working as an intern at Blumhouse… or KFC.


    And, Back to the Rest of my Saturday

    And so, my friend, I must return to the rest of my Saturday, hopefully to take a wee nap, after a cup of tea kindly made by rising horror star Megan Tremethick… whose beauty is, unfortunately, not matched by her tea-making abilities!

    I hope you’ll all come back to visit me, and I also hope you take the opportunity to be kind to yourselves. Weekends, for me, can often carry a stress and a weight of expectation, as if the weekend, which ironically should be the time to rest, is wasted if it cannot conquer a to-do list. Do your best to resist those urges. Take time to breathe, and until we meet again!

    Lawrie Brewster