Culprit Creative

  • Festival

    The ShortList Online Film Festival: Part 1

    Part 1 coverage of The Wrap's debut online short film festival. Knowing Chris Kezelos from his film Zero, a favorite of both Andrew and I, we were certainly excited to receive an email from him stating that his newest film, The Maker, was coming online.

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    Horror Alberto Evangelio

    La Cruz (The Cross)

    A father daughter driving lesson quickly escalates into horror.

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    Drama Louise Bagnall

    Late Afternoon

    Oscar Shortlist for 2019! Emily has her afternoon tea and lets her mind wander back into the past. She journeys through her memories, reliving moments from her life. What she discovers there will challenge her in unexpected ways.

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    Comedy Foster Wilson & Brian Leahy

    Made Public

    On the eve of his wedding day, a groom’s cold feet go viral, forcing him and his bride to rely on the court of public opinion to save or destroy their marriage.

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    Documentary Madeleine Chapman

    Scratched: Lee Ralph

    In the 1980s, New Zealand skateboarder Lee Ralph had the world at his feet. But right when he seemed poised to join the sport’s elite, he was kicked out of the USA and the limelight for good.

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    Experimental Matty Brown

    The Distraction

    Welcome to your anxiety attack. A 10-minute short exploring the very visceral and disorienting world of living with severe anxiety and depression.

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    Sci‑Fi Michael Lukk Litwak

    Alpha Squadron

    From Michael Lukk Litwak (The Life and Death of Tommy Chaos and Stacey Danger), the story of a fighter pilot trying to keep his group of friends together as they grow apart.

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    Documentary Andrew Sales

    Aleatoric

    Typically incorporating samples of obscure sounds and speech, records like "The Lemon of Pink" have made "The Books" seminal 21st century music artists. A short profile that fascinatingly matches the tone of its filmmaking to the pleasures of their music.

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    Sci‑Fi Ian Wharton & Edward Shires

    Solar

    Day follows night, follows day, follows night. That is until the natural poetry of motion is thrown out of sync by mechanical failure.

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