H.A.G.S. (Have a Good Summer)
A portrait of growing up told through the pages of my middle school yearbook. Go Hornets.
A portrait of growing up told through the pages of my middle school yearbook. Go Hornets.
Broken, like the old watches he repairs, a widowed watchmaker spends his remaining days in solitude, distracting himself with repetitive activities to pass the time and attempt to ease his sadness.
A filmmaker documents her relationship with her grandmother for one month before she dies, and several months after.
After Ronin neglects to clear up her dropped groceries, they start to mix and bubble, transforming into a small pudding - which begins to grow at an alarming rate
A young woman explores her sexual autonomy through a series of discomfiting encounters, in Sofia Banzhaf’s uncommonly deft and perceptive look at millennial romance.
As short film curators, we often get asked the broad question: why make a short film? After all, they tend to be money losers, and even if you do capture lightning in a bottle and manage to go viral, that doesnt necessarily translate to fame and fortune. So, why do it? Well, there is a popular assertion that a short film can be a pivotal stepping stone to a feature.
Nominated for an Academy Award®, a virtuoso jazz pianist and film composer tracks his family's lineage through his 91-year-old grandfather from Jim Crow Florida to the Walt Disney Concert Hall.
With $25k at stake, the Top Ten entries are available to view. Vote your fave for the People's Choice Award and be entered for a chance at winning a trip for 2 to the 2018 Golden Globes
The indignities of life add up, sometimes more than you can take. But our protagonist is fine thanks.
A man finds a family of strangers in his house and has an extremely difficult time asking them to leave.