Solo? Mio? Not Even Close
How A Bunch of Angels Made This Movie
If you are looking for the perfect movie for Valentine’s Day, I can recommend taking your special someone to Solo Mio. It is a heartwarming, thoroughly entertaining movie.
My wife and I enjoyed seeing it at our favorite theater this weekend. It was the first time we took advantage of our free tickets as members of the Angel Guild. I’m glad we did.
I had heard that the film’s production budget was only $4 million. The acting, pacing, story, cinematography, and music are magnifico. It feels like a film with a much larger budget, beautifully made by a talented team of collaborating creative storytellers.
It is in that context, that I say there’s something misleading about the title Solo Mio .
If you translate it, it means “only mine.” Singular. Personal. Solo.
But like every film that makes it to the screen, especially one that finds its way into theaters, this movie is anything but a solo effort. It takes creative talent to make a film. It takes even more alignment to get it financed, distributed, and seen.
And it takes something rarer still to make it profitable.
That’s what makes Solo Mio worth paying attention to, not just as an entertaining romantic comedy released days before Valentine’s Day, but as a case study in how movies are beginning to move from idea to audience in a very different way.
I went into this film expecting entertainment. I came out thinking about how it was made and what we can learn from it. That starts with recognizing that a whole bunch of Angels made it happen.
Angel Studios
I first became aware of Angel Studios a couple of years ago, the way most people did, through the impact they were making in storytelling. Friends mentioned The Chosen. Then there was all the industry chatter around Sound of Freedom. I paid attention to the name, but I didn’t stop to study the model.
That changed in early 2025 when I was deep into writing STORYSMART® Storytelling for ALL. As I examined the current state of the film and entertainment industry, particularly the imbalance of power between creators, studios, and distributors, I found myself searching for real-world examples of alternative approaches. Not theories. Not manifestos. Actual operating models.
Shortly after I published my book last summer, I watched a long-form YouTube interview with Angel’s founders. What caught my attention wasn’t ideology. It was their modern data driven infrastructure and thoughtful industry-lifting mindset.
They weren’t talking about “fixing Hollywood.” They were talking about building a system that aligned audiences, creators, and distribution in a different order than we’re used to seeing. It is all about building a deeper connection and shorter pathway between creators and audiences.
Yes. Yes. Yes! I love it!
These guys really get it, I thought to myself.
Candidly, I had initially assumed the name for the studio was a faith-based decision but learned that the name comes from the idea of early-stage Angel investors.
The Angel Studio founders talked about how they funded their business, taking advantage of the Obama-era shift in SEC regulations that allowed a type of audience investment model wasn’t previously available.
The Jumpstart Our Businesses Startups (JOBS) Act of 2012 became effective via the SEC in May 2016. Angel Studios (originally under its predecessor brand, VidAngel), took advantage of the equity crowdfunding provisions. They used Regulation A+ to raise funds for the business and later used Regulation Crowdfunding (Reg CF) to fund the first season of The Chosen, raising $11 million from 18,000 investors.
Listening to the founders talk about their vision and journey to this point really shifted my thinking about our industry’s way forward. The fact that these founders came from a marketing background, understood data, and made it a point to talk to exhibitors about their data really opened my eyes.
Having worked in baseball, which is all about selling tickets and getting butts in seats, I find it refreshing to hear film studio executives talk about the importance of theaters and the shared experience of seeing a movie.
The fact that they are speaking to exhibitors, care about using data to make informed decisions and are driven by a mission as much as running a profitable business is heartening.
After that podcast, I promised myself I’d do more research into their business model and learn more about their approach as I believe it offers answers for the documentary and independent film communities.
Then a short time later, I heard about Truth & Treason through Daren Smith’s podcast. Watching that film sharpened my curiosity. This wasn’t just counterprogramming; it was evidence of a pipeline that could move projects into the world without relying on traditional studio greenlight rituals.
After that, my wife and I joined the Angel Guild in November. Not because we wanted free tickets, though those don’t hurt, but because I wanted to understand how the machine works from the inside.
If I’m going to spend the next chapter of my career helping filmmakers build sustainable storytelling careers, I need to understand this more deeply.
Joining the Angel Guild
While I’m not a big “joiner,” I joined the Angel Guild after seeing Truth & Treason.
Being an Angel Guild member changes your relationship to movies in a subtle but meaningful way. Signing up is no different than subscribing to Netflix or Hulu, but you will notice the difference right away.
It isn’t just a “subscription,” you are treated as a member. Expect to get a fair number of emails. It’s sort of like buying a ticket from the
St. Louis Cardinals. Expect a lot of emails. You are a fan. The team wants to build a relationship with you. Email is central to that.
But in the case of Angel Studios, it isn’t salesy stuff. You’re not getting spammed about Bobblehead nights and the latest coupon offer.
The communication is about the stories. They also treat you a bit like a studio executive with their greenlighting process.
How about that? You get the corner office next to Sal Saperstein and get to pick movies!
Seriously, Angel regularly emails members about “Torches,” short proof-of-concept films submitted by creators for audience voting.
I’ll be honest: I’m new enough that I haven’t voted yet. I’ve watched. I’ve read. I’ve observed how they communicate with me, but I haven’t engaged back yet. And that’s intentional. I joined not just as a viewer, but as a student of the model.
I’m someone trying to understand what it feels like to be on the other side of the greenlight decision. From the audience’s perspective. From a filmmaker’s perspective. And ultimately from the perspective of someone actively thinking about how studios should function in a changing entertainment industry.
Angel also offers Angel Guild members two free tickets a month for certain theatrical releases. That matters more than it might seem.
It lowers friction. It primes attendance. And it reinforces the idea that going to the theater is part of participating in the Angel ecosystem.
A few months into our membership, Solo Mio is the first of those offers we’ve been able to take advantage of. And it’s a fitting one.
Solo Mio Is a Fascinating Case Study
Solo Mio is Angel’s first romantic comedy. That alone makes it interesting.
Rom-coms used to be a dependable part of the theatrical landscape—mid-budget films with recognizable stars, clear audience appeal, and a reasonable path to profitability.
Today, they’re often pushed to streaming or dismissed as “too small” for theaters unless paired with massive star power. That’s because “Big Hollywood” typically relies on a spray it everywhere shotgun approach to mass marketing, rather than targeted audience outreach.
They haven’t built a relationship with anyone. Our studio in Utah uses a different approach entirely.
This film threads that needle.
It stars Kevin James; someone my wife and I have enjoyed watching since his King of Queens days. My son Charlie has liked him ever since I took him to see Pixels.
Personally, I’ve always appreciated his comedic timing and his instinct for broadly accessible storytelling. If he’s in a film, I usually want to see it.

The fact that I once met him when I was with the Cardinals, arranging a lighthearted promotion at the St. Louis Zoo with Adam Wainwright and Fredbird through a film promoting friend from high school is a fun footnote.
But it’s not why this movie matters.
What matters is that Solo Mio sits at an unusual intersection: big enough to feel familiar, small enough to be financially disciplined, and supported by a distribution model that didn’t rely on a handful of executives guessing what audiences might want.
Instead, the audience had a say.
The Torch Process
Angel’s greenlight process begins with something called a Torch.
A Torch isn’t a trailer. It’s not a sizzle reel. And it’s not a pitch deck with mood boards and comps. It’s a short, standalone piece of content at least five minutes long that is designed to demonstrate tone, story, and execution.
In other words, it is proof that the filmmakers can deliver what they’re promising.
Creators submit Torches to Angel. Guild members watch them. And then they vote.
Those votes matter.
Angel uses clear scoring thresholds to determine what happens next. Projects intended for theatrical distribution must receive a very high level of audience support, around 85% approval, to move forward toward theaters.
That number is important. It’s not a marketing slogan. It’s a gate.
Solo Mio cleared that gate.
That means the film didn’t just pass an internal review or perform well in a test screening. It reached a level of audience validation strong enough to justify theatrical distribution. Before opening weekend. Before a dollar was spent on prints and marketing.
That flips the traditional model on its head.
De-Risking Distribution
In Hollywood, studios have more data than ever. Streaming platforms know what people watch, when they pause, and when they stop. They know habits. They know patterns.
What they don’t have is participation.
The “Big Hollywood” approach doesn’t empower that sense of ownership that comes from asking someone to play a role in the process.
Angel’s model introduces something different: agency. When audiences vote on projects, they’re not just expressing preference—they’re creating buy-in. They’re emotionally invested before the movie exists.
That matters for filmmakers.
An audience that helped greenlight a film is more likely to show up for it. More likely to talk about it. More likely to feel some sense of ownership, however informal. That doesn’t eliminate risk, but it meaningfully reduces the downside of distribution.
From a business perspective, that’s not a small thing. Distribution is where many independent films go to die, not because they’re bad, but because they’re invisible.
Angel is nurturing a relationship with its audience that goes well beyond algorithmic recommendation engines.
It’s not just “here’s what we think you’ll like” suggest selling.
It’s “you helped decide this should exist” why don’t you come see it and tell your friends. “We are grateful for your support and glad you are part of our community.”
Paying the Bills Always Matters
There’s a tendency in creative circles to prioritize prestige over sustainability. Awards. Reviews. Festival laurels.
Those things can matter. But they don’t keep the lights on.
Sustainable careers are built on projects that make economic sense. That means projects that recoup, turn a profit, and justify the effort it took to make them. Romantic comedies, historically, have played that role quietly and effectively.
I expect Solo Mio to perform well from a business perspective. Not because it’s chasing critical acclaim, but because it understands its audience, controls its costs, and entered the marketplace with momentum already built in.
That’s not selling out. That’s sustainable professional storytelling.
Why “Solo” Is the Wrong Word
Which brings me back to the title.
Solo Mio wasn’t made by one person. It wasn’t greenlit by one executive. And it won’t succeed or fail in isolation. It exists because writers, actors, directors, financiers, distributors and audiences were aligned around a shared outcome.
It takes a village to make a film. And it takes a whole bunch of villages for it to succeed financially.
That’s the lesson I’m taking away as someone focused on building sustainable careers for storytellers.
No one succeeds alone. Distribution is power. And audience alignment is no longer optional, it is foundational.
That’s why I’m studying Angel closely. Not to copy it wholesale, but to understand what they get right about incentives, participation, and trust. I think they have figured out that it isn’t chasing critical acclaim or “prestige” stories. It is all about the audience.
Looking Ahead
I plan to participate in the Torch voting process the next time I’m invited to do so, not just as an observer, but as an engaged member of the audience. I want to understand what that decision feels like from the inside, because that perspective matters if you’re serious about building studios rather than just making films.
I went to Solo Mio because I love romantic comedies and because I’m building something that depends on understanding how films get made, funded, and seen.
And if this movie proves anything, it’s that the future of storytelling isn’t solo at all.
It’s collaborative. Participatory. It’s Storytelling for ALL™ or in Italian Narrazione Per Tutti. Not Solo Mio.
About the Storytelling for ALL™ Newsletter
The Storytelling for ALL™ LinkedIn Newsletter is a biweekly newsletter examining how stories are developed, protected, and brought to life in today’s evolving storytelling economy.
Every other week, I explore the creative, ethical, and economic forces shaping books, films, documentaries, and other story work through the lens of development, rights, collaboration, and long-term value.
Written primarily for creators and collaborators, the newsletter also serves story sources who want to understand how their true stories move from lived experience to finished work and how better structure early leads to better outcomes later.
For deeper studio thinking, tools, and updates, The STORYSMART® Way is our monthly email newsletter for members of the Storytelling for ALL™ community.


