Blacklist

  • Play
    Horror Kate Trefry

    How to be Alone

    The directorial debut of "Stranger Things" writer Kate Trefry, this dark and wickedly fun short film stars Maika Monroe as a woman whose deepest fears seem to manifest physically when her husband leaves for the night shift.

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    Thriller Minhal Baig

    After Sophie

    A documentary filmmaker investigates the troubling, unexpected suicide of a teenager.

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    Horror Daniel Gray & Tom C J Brown

    Teeth

    The life of a misguided and intensely focused man, chronicled through his oral obsessions. A creepily offputting short that played Sundance and SXSW

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    Thriller Ben Briand

    Blood Pulls a Gun

    A sexy, coming-of-age tale from the acclaimed director of "Apricot". A teenage girl gets a keyhole look into a dangerous and mysterious world when a tattooed stranger checks into her roadside motel.

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    Documentary Matthew K. Firpo

    SHELTER | Human Stories from Central America

    A quiet look at the lives on the line. First-hand stories from Central American migrants and asylum seekers searching for a better life in the north.

  • Filmmaker Update

    Alumni Roundup: January 2016

    We share some of the cool stuff Short of the Week featured filmmakers have been up to this past month.

  • Play
    Drama Solvan "Slick" Naim

    Stanhope

    Based on true events, a Brooklyn teen gets caught up in a web of violence as a paid assassin.

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    Drama Stephen Fingleton

    Magpie

    A man lives in a forest, surviving through murder and deceit. When he finds himself drawn to two strangers, his strict code of self-preservation is put to the test.

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    Comedy Kevin Oeser

    Grand Zero

    A family man returns to his hometown to discover he's the last person in town who's not part of a legendary network marketing pyramid scheme.

  • Playlist

    Best Live-Action | SOTW Awards 2012!

    Best Documentary[php]playlist(7788);[/php] With technology giving a platform to hordes of tenacious, DSLR-wielding documentarians, the short doc has never been more popular, or so mind-numbingly repetitive. But, just when you think that every ornery old lady, sensitive "artist" or performer of a single human-pet-trick has had their life digitally preserved in a gauze of shallow depth of field, Sean Dunne comes around to show you how marvelously strange our human species is.