Influencia

WRITTEN & DIRECTED BY Ryan Rosenheim & Patrick De Vinck

PRODUCED by Jan Luis Castellanos

A despondent young man, Cesar, wakes up on the beach hungover. As he readies himself for the day, more and more of his poverty is revealed. Mourning the loss of his mother, Cesar drinks himself into a stupor, listening to his mother’s old voicemail on repeat. After sobering up enough, Cesar sneaks onto a wealthy Malibu property to film a video with a Lamborghini.

ABOUT THE FILM

“Influencia” won Best Actor in a Drama at the 8th Annual Official Latino Film & Arts Festival.

ABOUT THE FILMmakers

Ryan Rosenheim is an LA native, valley rat with a BFA in acting from the University of Michigan. There, he also minored in screenwriting and creative writing. After short acting stints at The Public in New York and The Eugene O’Neill Theater Center, Ryan returned to LA to pursue writing and filmmaking. Since then, he’s scored, written, directed, and acted in dozens of indie projects, some of which led to very educational optioning and pitching opportunities in the industry.

Patrick de Vinck, also a valley man, came back from his own east coast adventures at Rutgers where he studied economics. During the pandemic, Patrick delved back into creative endeavors and was able to seamlessly blend in his proclivity for numbers. Thus he put on his producer hat and reoriented his filmmaking aspirations toward being a producer-writer.

READ OUR INTERVIEW WITH Ryan and Patrick


Welcome to our Short of the Week series. Can you tell us a little bit about yourself and your filmmaking background?

Throughout highschool, we (Ryan and Patrick) threw together a handful of goofy films. Despite Patrick dislocating his knee at the bottom of a three-mile hike shooting location, the joy we experienced while shooting these shorts mused about in the backs of our minds as we endeavored different paths at uni. 

Ryan continued on, not in film exactly, but as an acting major and screenwriting minor at the University of Michigan. His senior year, however, Ryan returned to his roots to shoot a film called Scott for Now about a man with high quality intentions but horrendous execution. 

Meanwhile, Patrick took a more practical route in school, but ultimately his love for filmmaking resurfaced. The childhood videographer and raconteur couldn’t hide from his true nature.

Tell us about the genesis of Influencia?

 After graduating, Patrick joined his long-time friend Jan Luis Castellanos on the set of 13 Reasons Why. There, Patrick was inspired and began spitballing an idea that he wanted to write for several members of the cast.

A little rusty, Patrick called up Ryan for some pilot pointers. Per usual with Ryan, eccentric that he is, he became quite invested in the idea. That said, the initial pilot was a raunchy comedy and Ryan saw its merit as a dark comedy drama and began mining the comedy for its riches in drama.  Ultimately, the two became co-writers and had at last reunited.

After the pilot’s ten millionth draft, the satisfied creative team decided to shoot a proof of concept to buff up our pitch. That said, all our schedules had only one brief overlap...two weeks out. We pulled a montage from the pilot, tweaked it, and voila we had a script. We used our recognizable talent to bait in a brilliant crew, and voila we had Kenzen Takahashi behind the camera. 

Suddenly our two day shoot was over and Influencia was in the oven baking.

What were some of the main obstacles you experienced when making of Influencia and how did you overcome them?

No film ever goes “as planned.” Sometimes the car transporting talent to location breaks down. Sometimes you have to shoot sunset to look like a sunrise. Sometimes you run out of fake vomit. A lack of location permits, a two-day timeframe, a wee baby of a budget, and a whole lot of vertigo (Ryan’s got a condition) made the process a challenge for sure. That said, with an enormous amount of generosity from the crew, we managed to pull ourselves — and a nice little poem of a film — together. 

Obstacles are inherent to the filmmaking process. As much as we love film, we love mediation and problem solving. So any hiccup — big or small — is, in our minds, a reset. Forget the plan, forget the old idea. It’s irrelevant now. The obstacle forces you to think of something better. “Oh, we’re out of fake blood? Fine, let’s give him blunt force head trauma and have him stutter, moan, and spit about like a mummy.” You suddenly find your actor giving the performance of a lifetime, a choice much more horrifying than the bit of classic gore you had planned.

Tell us about the journey of getting your film to audiences.

When people aren’t getting paid much, the goal to finish is — while perhaps impassioned — not priority. That said, even though the film was intended to be a supplement to our pitch, when we finally finished, we couldn’t bear to put the film up on a shelf (or pitch deck) where it’d only see the light of day by the dog-eating studio execs.  

Being a fan of the Annual Latino Film Festival, our star and executive producer, Jan Luis, submitted Influencia to the festival. We premiered our film in Palm Springs, but still were hesitant to post it on socials. Alas, we finally decided our hard work was worth viewing. We threw it up on Vimeo and have had great feedback from viewers. It surprisingly has meant a lot to folks.

What advice or hacks would you give to other short filmmakers?

The best advice is, “Become great friends with rich people.” That, however, is not so easily done, so some practical advice would be to practice thinking on your feet. Just as an experiment, go into events or work without a plan. Don’t set ultimatums and don’t put on limiters. See where things take you and wherever they do take you, try to make the circumstances work for you, for your tastes and needs. 

Also, ask for help. Control is hard to give up, but there’s too many hats to wear as an independent filmmaker. If you can surround yourself with trusted advisors and talent, shed a load and ask for help. You don’t have to do it all by yourself. 

What do you think is the biggest challenge short filmmakers face trying to break into the industry?

When “readers” read your scripts or executives hear out your pitch, they aren’t assuming you have any merit. You could be the absolute greatest screenwriter of all time, but they aren’t looking at your work with the lens of genius on. We are not often given a chance to be taken seriously. So, with that, we think the biggest challenge facing indie filmmakers is breaking out of the “indie” title. Eventually, once your catalog is big enough, they might start looking. Until then, it’s pretty damn hard to not have to fund your own projects.

Any film recommendations that we should add to our watchlist?

For short films, selfishly, check out the very amateur, very heartfelt Scott for Now. Unselfishly, we’re very into a couple A24 newbies out, Aftersun and Past Lives. There’s also a Colombian film we just stumbled into called Embrace of the Serpent that absolutely had us jaw-dropped.

Also, Worst Person in the World was so damn moving that Patrick passed out in the theater next to Ryan…he also has a condition. 



Interested in getting your work selected as Short of the Week?