Every once in a while a movie pops up that reminds indie filmmakers that the system isn’t completely locked up by Hollywood. Iron Lung is one of those movies.
This thing reportedly cost around $3 million to make and pulled in over $50 million worldwide, which is about as close to a dream scenario as you get in indie film.
Now, I normally watch action movies and adventure stuff. If there aren’t swords swinging or people getting thrown through tables, it usually isn’t my thing. But I sat down and watched Iron Lung because everyone kept telling me how good it was and how big of a deal it was for independent filmmakers.
And I’ll be honest — there are some real lessons here for anyone trying to make movies outside the studio system.
Lesson 1: One Location Can Still Work
Most of this movie takes place inside a single ship/submarine environment. That’s it.
For a lot of filmmakers, that sounds like a limitation.
But if you’ve actually produced movies, you know that fewer locations = fewer problems.
It means:
- fewer company moves
- easier lighting
- easier sound control
- lower costs
When everything is happening in one space, you’re forced to get creative with tension, blocking, camera movement, and performance.
And honestly, that’s where filmmaking gets interesting.
Lesson 2: A Strong Performance Can Carry the Entire Movie
This movie basically asks one actor to carry the entire thing.
That’s not easy.
I don’t know many actors who want to do a film where the audience is basically just watching your face and hearing your voice the whole time. That’s a lot of pressure.
But it works here. The performance keeps you engaged even though the movie is mostly contained inside that ship.
That’s a reminder for filmmakers:
Casting matters more than spectacle.
You can have the coolest concept in the world, but if the performance doesn’t hold up, the movie falls apart.
Lesson 3: Sound Design Does a Lot of the Heavy Lifting
One thing the film does really well is building tension through sound.
You’re constantly hearing things like:
- pressure changes
- mechanical noises
- alarms
- leaks
The audience starts tracking those sounds because they know something bad is probably coming.
That’s how you build suspense without spending millions on visual effects.
Good sound design will make a low-budget film feel ten times bigger than it actually is.
Lesson 4: The “Ticking Clock” Always Works
The movie keeps throwing countdowns and problems at the main character.
Things are breaking. Pressure is changing. Systems are failing.
That’s the classic ticking clock device.
And it works because the audience starts thinking:
“Okay… when does this thing finally go wrong?”
That anticipation keeps people watching even when the movie is mostly dialogue and atmosphere.
Lesson 5: Camera Work Matters More in Small Spaces
If you’re filming in a tiny location, you can’t just lock the camera down and hope for the best.
The filmmakers here did a lot of:
- rack focusing
- shifting camera angles
- aggressive framing
- tight shots from weird positions
The camera is constantly working to keep the visual energy alive.
And whoever was pulling focus on this movie was working overtime, because there’s a lot of rack focus happening.
Lesson 6: Save the Chaos for the End
The movie spends a lot of time building tension before it finally escalates into some pretty brutal body horror near the end.
And that works because the audience has already been sitting in the tension for a while.
When the payoff comes, it hits harder.
That’s something a lot of filmmakers get wrong. They try to start the movie at level ten.
Sometimes it’s better to start slow and let the pressure build.
Lesson 7: Indie Film Can Still Win
The most encouraging part of this whole thing is the success story.
A movie with a few million dollars behind it managed to generate tens of millions in revenue and got people talking.
That tells you something important.
You don’t always need:
- massive VFX budgets
- giant studio marketing machines
- 200-person crews
Sometimes what you need is:
- a clear concept
- smart execution
- an audience that actually cares
One Final Thing: Support Indie Film
If you want more movies like this to exist, people actually have to support them.
Buy the ticket. Rent the movie. Stream it legally.
Don’t pirate it.
I know people argue about that online all the time, but if you’re a creator, you know how hard it is to make something in the first place.
If we want independent filmmakers to keep pushing boundaries, we have to make sure they can actually make a living doing it.
Final Verdict
Iron Lung isn’t the kind of movie I usually watch. It’s not an action film, and it’s not packed with spectacle.
But as a case study in indie filmmaking, it’s absolutely worth seeing.
Because sometimes the best reminder filmmakers need is this:
You don’t need a massive production to make something people care about.
Sometimes all you need is one location, one actor, and a really good idea.