THE LAST BROADCAST

A reclusive radio host in the Nevada desert begins transmitting a mysterious signal that may not be of this world — but the real horror is what happens when the world stops listening.

Synopsis

In the dying town of Blackrock, Nevada, 58-year-old radio host **Earl Voss** broadcasts his nightly show, *The Last Broadcast*, from a crumbling AM station on the edge of the desert. Earl’s show is a relic — a mix of conspiracy theories, local news, and rambling monologues about the past — but it’s the only thing keeping him connected to a world that’s forgotten him. When Earl picks up a strange, looping signal on his equipment, he becomes obsessed with decoding it, convinced it’s a message from his late wife. As he amplifies the signal, his broadcasts begin to warp reality for his dwindling audience: listeners report vivid hallucinations, shared dreams, and a creeping sense that the desert is expanding into their homes. But when a podcasting duo arrives to investigate the phenomenon, they uncover something far more unsettling than extraterrestrial life — the terrifying banality of being ignored. *The Last Broadcast* is a quiet, eerie meditation on loneliness, legacy, and the stories we tell ourselves to stay sane, wrapped in the haunting beauty of the American Southwest. Think *Pontypool* meets *There Will Be Blood*, with the existential dread of *Under the Skin*.

Visual Language & Influences

The film’s visual language is defined by the stark, sun-bleached landscapes of the Nevada desert, contrasted with the claustrophobic, analog warmth of Earl’s radio station. The cinematography leans into the tension between the vast, indifferent natural world and the fragile, man-made structures within it. Wide shots of the desert at golden hour evoke a sense of isolation and timelessness, while tight, grainy close-ups of Earl’s face and his antiquated equipment emphasize his decaying connection to reality.

Influences include:

The color palette is dominated by faded ochres, sickly greens, and the harsh whites of desert light, punctuated by the warm, artificial glow of radio equipment. The sound design is equally critical, blending the static hum of analog signals with the eerie, dissonant score to create an atmosphere of creeping unease.

Storyboard

1. Opening shot: The radio tower looms over the desert, a solitary monument to a forgotten era. The sky is alive with color, but the land below is still and silent.
2. Earl in the studio: His voice cracks as he rambles into the microphone, the weight of his loneliness palpable in the dim, dust-filled air.
3. Earl’s quest: He treks through the desert, radio receiver in hand, searching for the source of the signal. The landscape dwarfs him, emphasizing his insignificance.
4. The signal: The radio dial glitches and distorts, the numbers blurring into something otherworldly. The sound of static morphs into a voice that may or may not be real.
5. The effect: A listener’s home warps under the influence of the broadcast. The walls seem to breathe, the furniture melts into the floor, and the radio hums with an unnatural energy.
6. The end: Earl sits in silence, the radio station dark and dead. The broadcast is over, and no one was listening. The camera lingers on his face, a portrait of quiet despair.