Collaboration Factory

  • Best of the Month

    Best of the Month: October 2024

    Dance, Horror and Animation come together in this trio of short films selected by the S/W team as 'Best of the Month' for October 2024.

  • Play
    Drama Sofia Coppola

    Lick the Star

    **CURRENTLY OFFLINE** - A cruel clique of high school girls obsessed with social life wreak havoc on their classmates with their psychological torment in this early film by Sofia Coppola.

  • Play
    Comedy Josh Close

    1, 2, 3... You Please

    Jesse, a successful young woman struggles to accept her OCD while mending a broken heart and falling in love.

  • Play
    Drama Eoin Duffy

    On Departure

    A lone traveller makes his way through an airport before finally accepting his journey's end.

  • Play
    Dramedy Cecilia Delgado

    Young Mom

    20-something Sofia’s relationship with 30-something Claire is strained when Claire reveals she wants kids soon but doesn’t think Sophia is mature enough. Sofia sets out to prove she is ready to become a parent, no matter what.

  • Filmmaker Update

    An Introduction to Podcast Directing with Stefanie Abel Horowitz

    With fictional podcasts identified as a potential career path for directors, Stefanie Abel Horowitz (sometimes, I think about dying) joins us to discuss what it was like to work with Rami Malek and Cole Sprouse and the difference between directing podcasts and short films.

  • Play
    Drama Adinah Dancyger

    Cheer Up Baby

    A young woman who has been sexually assaulted by a stranger on the subway is rendered with psychological menace and sensory dislocation in this elliptical tale.

  • Play
    Sci‑Fi Michael Spiccia

    Yardbird

    A girl with a secret past comes out of hiding and is forced to take on the town bullies with the thing she fears most - herself.

  • Play
    Experimental Mitch Jenkins

    Jimmy's End

    Comics legend Alan Moore along with Mitch Jenkins unveil a phantasmagoric English dreamtime made of goosefleshed pin-up girls, burned out comedians and faulty lights, with judgement just behind the tinsel.

  • Loading