Script Apart with Al Horner

Weapons with Zach Cregger

14 snips
Feb 24, 2026
Zach Cregger, writer-director known for genre films that probe personal themes, discusses Weapons. He talks about the film’s non-linear, chaptered structure and why he kept its mystery. He explains changes from early drafts, the film’s provocative imagery, and how personal grief and sobriety shaped his creative choices.
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INSIGHT

Subconscious-Led Writing Produces Universal Stories

  • Zach Cregger lets his subconscious lead, trusting personal urgency to shape a film rather than imposing a didactic message.
  • He wrote Weapons out of grief and aimed to make the personal universal so audiences could project their own meanings onto it.
ADVICE

Make Movies That Might Be Embarrassing

  • Take creative risks even if they might feel embarrassing; theater needs works that surprise audiences.
  • Zach urges filmmakers to swing big because rare, original experiences are what once made theaters thrilling.
ADVICE

Persist Through Doubt Instead Of Restarting

  • When stuck, allow doubt but keep circling the problem instead of abandoning the script or restarting prematurely.
  • Writing on spec gave Zach permission to fail and take risks without studio pressure, which ultimately helped him solve structural issues.
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