Hard Faith Podcast

Hard Faith

Join us at Hard Faith™ Welcoming honest, gritty, redemptive stories Hard Faith™ is a media production company established for the purpose of bringing compelling stories about the human condition to a film going audience in a way that artistically and speaks truth to this present generation in a fresh and powerful way. The world needs quality entertainment and art that speaks truth boldly. We need stories that are set in real-world settings with characters that talk about the ultimate truth. We accomplish this with realistic, real world scenarios and real life characters. Hollywood has been the masters of compelling storytelling for generations. These artists of dramatic cinema have produced some of the worlds greatest existential films dealing with human existence. ​ Our desire is to make hard hitting, thought provoking secular art with characters who are portrayed as real life, flawed people who still find hope.

  1. S4 - Ep4 Hard Faith Fest 2026 Los Angeles

    May 2

    S4 - Ep4 Hard Faith Fest 2026 Los Angeles

    Hard Faith Fest LA Year Four — Official Selections & Nominations Announcement In this episode of the Hard Faith Podcast, Spencer and McKenna Folmar give a full update on everything happening with Hard Faith, including the recent wrap of their newest feature film, The Days Are Evil, and the upcoming fourth annual Hard Faith Fest LA, taking place June 25–28, 2026 at Lake Avenue Church in Pasadena, California. Spencer opens the episode by sharing that The Days Are Evil has officially wrapped production after a demanding but deeply meaningful shoot in Central Pennsylvania. The film is the first installment in the upcoming Suicide Trilogy, with the same core cast continuing into the next two films. Spencer and McKenna reflect on the strength of the cast and crew, the emotional weight of the material, and the grace they felt throughout production. Spencer also shares that he has already begun editing and is excited about how the film is coming together. The conversation then turns to Hard Faith Fest LA Year Four, which will be the largest Hard Faith Fest yet. This year marks the festival’s first four-day event, hosted by Lake Avenue Church, a venue Spencer and McKenna describe as beautiful, gracious, and ideal for the growing festival. They discuss the move to Pasadena, the convenience of nearby hotel room blocks, the walkability of the area, and the ability for guests to fly into Burbank as an easier alternative to LAX. Spencer and McKenna emphasize that Hard Faith Fest is not simply a screening event, but a true gathering place for Christian artists, filmmakers, writers, actors, producers, and industry professionals who are trying to tell honest, redemptive stories. The festival will include screenings, screenplay presentations, panels, workshops, live musical performances, the Pitch Fest, afterparties, Sunday worship at Lake Avenue Church, and a closing time of prayer and encouragement. This year’s festival theme is “Do Not Fear.” Spencer explains that the theme feels especially fitting for Christian artists who are called to create courageously, even when the path is uncertain. The episode frames the festival as a place of encouragement, community, and faith-driven creative boldness. The heart of the episode is the official announcement of the Hard Faith Fest LA official selections and category nominations. The festival received its strongest and most competitive submissions yet, with hundreds of entries and more than fifty projects being screened or presented across the festival. The official selections include: Screenplays: At the Mercy of Faith, Blood or Communion, The Deplorable, Finding Hallie, Harvest Skies, Henry’s House, Indentured, Lower Than Angels, One Simple Thing, Paging Faith, The Portrait, Seasons Change, There Will Come a Day, Until We Climb, and Wonder Horse. Short Films: Beyond the Shadows, The Conversation, Convicted, Defender, Died Twice, ECCE HOMO, The King and The Maiden, Onesimus, Satisfied in You (Psalm 42), and To Philemon. Feature Films: Elijah Peel, The Hail Mary, Illusion of Faith, Jim vs the Future, Learning You, Miracle on the Precipice, The One, and Problem Attic. Student Films: Altar, And, Light, Life and Death, Mourning Dove, Palette of Dreams, SOLO DEUS, Shelter of the Reeds, and Then I Heard. Documentary Features: I Can Finally Breathe, Light of Cappadocia: Saints Arsenios & Paisios, MEARS: How One Woman Changed American Christianity, RESCUED - A Story of Redemption and Hope, and To The Ends. Documentary Shorts: In the Shadow of Grace, Jordan: Blessing Arab, The Missionary, The Potter, and The Farthest We Fall. The episode also announces selections in Best Original Song, Episodic / Television, and Animation, along with nominations for acting, directing, producing, writing, cinematography, editing, visual effects, costume design, makeup, casting, international film, composer, trailer, and additional festival awards. Spencer and McKenna close by congratulating all official selections and nominees, while also encouraging those who were not selected to continue creating and submit again in the future. They make clear that the festival’s mission is not only to recognize excellent work, but to champion artists who are telling stories that liberate. The episode ends with an invitation for listeners to buy tickets, attend all four days, take part in the full community experience, and join Hard Faith Fest LA in Pasadena for a festival rooted in faith, art, courage, and honest storytelling. www.HardFaithFest.com

    35 min
  2. S4 - Ep2 Sean P. Malone "Grand Canyon"

    Feb 9

    S4 - Ep2 Sean P. Malone "Grand Canyon"

    In this episode of the Hard Faith Podcast, host Spencer Folmar sits down with filmmaker and cinematographer Sean Malone, whose striking black-and-white short film Grand Canyon won second place at this year’s Hard Faith Film Festival in Hollywood.  Sean shares the deeply personal inspiration behind Grand Canyon, a film born out of the isolation, grief, and spiritual weight many experienced during the COVID era. Framed like a psalm of lament, the film follows a widowed minister struggling to hold onto faith amid darkness, division, and despair — ultimately becoming a cinematic prayer and cry out to God.  The conversation expands into Sean’s love of cinema, his influences ranging from Spielberg to Lawrence of Arabia, and his journey as an artist who wants filmmaking to carry real spiritual substance. Sean and Spencer reflect on the importance of theology in storytelling — not making films that feel preachy, but honest stories that still center Christian hope.  Sean also speaks candidly about his own faith journey, including seasons of depression, suffering, and slow spiritual growth — emphasizing that Christians may walk through valleys, but never without hope. Together, Spencer and Sean explore how hardship shapes character, how faith matures over time, and why art should ultimately point beyond ourselves to Christ.  Finally, Sean reflects on the unique spirit of Hard Faith Fest: a community marked not by transaction, but by love, dignity, and the belief that artists are made in the image of God. He shares plans for a possible Grand Canyon sequel and encourages listeners to keep creating meaningful work rooted in truth and redemption.

    1h 11m
  3. S3 - Ep12: End of Year Giving & Summary

    12/29/2025

    S3 - Ep12: End of Year Giving & Summary

    On the Season 3 finale of the Hard Faith Podcast, Spencer Folmar is joined by his wife and Hard Faith COO, McKenna Folmar, for a candid end-of-year reflection that closes out 2025 and looks ahead to what God may be preparing in 2026. Together, they unpack a year marked by both deep suffering and unexpected fruit—sharing openly about loss, perseverance, and why Hard Faith continues to exist for artists who feel unseen, constrained, or displaced by traditional faith spaces.  The episode recaps major milestones from the past year, including the first-ever Hard Faith regional event in New York City, which sold out theaters, overflowed its awards show, and confirmed a growing hunger for honest, unfiltered faith-driven storytelling on both coasts. Spencer and McKenna reflect on the leap of faith it took to pull off the NYC festival in just a few months, the supernatural sense of unity that marked the event, and how Hard Faith has become a gathering place where filmmakers find community, collaboration, and courage.  Looking forward, they announce key plans for Hard Faith Fest LA 2026 (June 25–28)—a four-day event in Hollywood themed “Do Not Fear,” featuring expanded workshops, live music, worship, commissioning, and new artistic categories. The conversation also previews upcoming books, original Hard Faith film projects, additional regional and international events under prayerful consideration, and the continued growth of the podcast into Season 4.  More than an update, this finale is an invitation—to pray, to partner, and to step into a movement committed to telling stories that liberate and bringing the Gospel to the lost sheep through art. As the year closes, Spencer and McKenna share their hearts, their gratitude, and their hope for what lies ahead, trusting God’s direction one step at a time.

    34 min
  4. S3 - Ep11: Sam Sorich "8Beats Anthology"

    12/22/2025

    S3 - Ep11: Sam Sorich "8Beats Anthology"

    On this episode of the Hard Faith Podcast, Spencer Folmar sits down with filmmaker, director, writer, and educator Sam Sorich for a wide-ranging and deeply honest conversation about faith, art, envy, conversion, and the spiritual cost of creating meaningful work in a volatile cultural moment. Sam reflects on his connection to Hard Faith Fest, where his visually striking anthology feature Eight Beats—eight short films inspired by the Beatitudes—won the Audience Awardand emerged as one of the festival’s most talked-about films.  Sam shares his unconventional journey into filmmaking, including an early artistic calling, a dramatic turn toward the Catholic seminary, a season of atheism, and a hard-won return to faith shaped by cinema, philosophy, and the work of René Girard. He unpacks how watching thousands of films during seminary became both an escape and a form of spiritual and artistic formation, eventually leading to a vision for Eight Beats as a Catholic answer to Kieslowski’s Decalogue—bold, incarnational, and unafraid of complexity.  The conversation also explores Sam’s international life (from Chicago to Colombia to California), his recent season teaching film, documentary, mimetic theory, horror, and AI at John Paul the Great Catholic University, and how mentoring young filmmakers became an unexpected source of healing for wounds formed earlier in his faith journey. Sam reflects candidly on envy, rivalry, and comparison in the creative life—especially watching close friends succeed—and offers a powerful spiritual framework for resisting the “Luciferian light” through humility, prayer, and identification with the blind beggar crying out for mercy.  Finally, Sam previews his new documentary project exploring UFOs, extraterrestrial phenomena, and the Catholic imagination, asking provocative questions about incarnation, reality, and how faith traditions can interpret a world that feels increasingly re-enchanted and unstable. It’s a thoughtful, theologically rich, and emotionally vulnerable episode that speaks directly to artists, filmmakers, and believers navigating doubt, ambition, and calling in real time.

    53 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Join us at Hard Faith™ Welcoming honest, gritty, redemptive stories Hard Faith™ is a media production company established for the purpose of bringing compelling stories about the human condition to a film going audience in a way that artistically and speaks truth to this present generation in a fresh and powerful way. The world needs quality entertainment and art that speaks truth boldly. We need stories that are set in real-world settings with characters that talk about the ultimate truth. We accomplish this with realistic, real world scenarios and real life characters. Hollywood has been the masters of compelling storytelling for generations. These artists of dramatic cinema have produced some of the worlds greatest existential films dealing with human existence. ​ Our desire is to make hard hitting, thought provoking secular art with characters who are portrayed as real life, flawed people who still find hope.