Vertical Cinema: Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

Vertical Cinema: Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

Vertical Cinema: Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

Ashraf Nahlous
Ashraf Nahlous
24 days ago

The Old System: Write - Shoot - Festival - Pray

We all know the traditional path:

You write a script, shoot the film, submit to festivals, hope for laurels, and try to impress the right producer, rep, or executive.

It’s a long game. And it still works if you win.

But it’s also slow, expensive, and full of gatekeepers.

Now, a new path is rising. One that bypasses the red tape and puts your work directly in front of an audience today.

It’s called the micro-drama.

What Is a Micro-Drama?

Micro-dramas are short, one-minute, vertical-format episodes designed for smartphone viewing.

Think soap opera meets TikTok, but scripted and serialized, usually with cliffhangers every 30–60 seconds.

They live on apps like ReelShort and DramaBox, where the first few episodes are fre,e and the rest are locked behind a paywall.

It’s addictive. It’s cheap to make. And it’s making real money.

Vertical Cinema Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

The Numbers That Made Me Look Twice

  • In 2024, China’s vertical-drama market generated $6.9 billion USD more than the entire Chinese cinema box office. (The Times UK)
  • Outside China, the global market added another $1.2 billion USD, mostly from the U.S.
  • The worldwide market is projected to grow to $14 billion USD by 2027. (The Times, Statista)
  • Platforms like ReelShort charge viewers up to £20 per week (~$25) to binge full shows.
  • One actor mentioned in The Times reported earning $1,000/day for a featured role on a micro-drama shoot.

Who’s Watching These?

This isn’t just Gen Z on TikTok.

The vertical drama audience is diverse and growing:

  • Stay-at-home moms in the U.S.
  • Nurses watch between shifts.
  • Cambridge graduates bingeing while cooking.
  • Young professionals treat it as a “digital soap opera with a pulse.”

These stories are quick, emotional, and addictive.

They fit into the lives of people who don’t have time for full-length films but still crave character and story.

Vertical Cinema Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

From "Soft Porn" to Solid Cinema: The Quality Is Evolving

Yes, many early micro-dramas were pure pulp:

Over-the-top love triangles, bad dubbing, questionable acting.

But things are changing fast.

  • Gwyneth Hughes (Vanity Fair) is now writing vertical dramas.
  • Some creators are adapting classics like Pride & Prejudice into vertical form.
  • Production teams now shoot on multi-cam setups, use proper lighting, locations, and costume, and produce up to 19 pages per day.
  • Entire series are filmed in 8–10 days on budgets around $150,000.

It’s not just quantity anymore; craft is entering the space.

The Industry Is Watching (But Still Hesitant)

According to The Times:

  • Both Netflix and Channel 4 are monitoring the vertical drama trend.
  • So far, no official commissions have been greenlit by major streamers.
  • But with viewership and revenue numbers this high, it’s only a matter of time before they jump in.

Studios don’t want to be late to the next TikTok.

Vertical drama platforms are already developing original IP, and some are being optioned for long-form adaptations.

Vertical Cinema Why Filmmakers Should Pay Attention

Why This Matters for Indie Filmmakers

Let’s be honest:

You don’t need anyone’s permission anymore.

Micro-dramas let you:

  • Skip the gatekeepers.
  • Test your stories directly with a real audience.
  • Get paid while you build your portfolio.
  • Own 100% of your IP.

You can still submit to festivals. You can still pitch to Netflix.

But now, you can build a following while doing it and maybe fund your next project with direct fan revenue.

My Next Step: Testing It Myself

I'm currently developing a 30-episode micro-drama series, fully vertical, shot for mobile. Each episode will be 60–90 seconds, designed for maximum cliffhangers, minimum budget, and fast turnaround.

This is not just an experiment in format, it’s an experiment in freedom.

Creative, financial, and structural freedom.

I’ll be documenting the journey, what works, what doesn’t, what earns, and what flops. And I’ll report back here on Stage 32 once we go live.

If you’re tired of waiting for someone to give you a chance, maybe it’s time to give your audience a chance to find you directly.

Let’s see where this road goes.

Let's hear your thoughts in the comments below!

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About the Author

Ashraf Nahlous

Ashraf Nahlous

Screenwriter, Director

Ashraf Nahlous is a Dubai-based writer and director known for bold, dialogue-driven storytelling across both narrative film and branded content. His short film This Is Love Too was nominated for Best Script and won Best Male Actor at Paramount's We Create Drama Festival (2025), earning praise for it...

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