Jamie Ryan Scott Brooks

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    Documentary Chris Landreth

    Ryan

    This Oscar-Winning film pairs psychedelic CG animation with documentary techniques to tell the story of legendary animator Ryan Larkin.

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    Horror Jamie Ryan Scott Brooks

    Behold the Noose

    An undaunted Sheriff's Deputy sets out on a solo mission to find a missing girl in the erie backwoods of East Texas

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    Dark Comedy Theo W. Scott

    Cuties

    A hand-drawn sequential telling of human history in all its horror and glory, culminating in our next evolutionary leap.

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    Drama Asher Jelinsky

    Miller & Son

    WINNER OF A 2019 STUDENT ACADEMY AWARD: A transwoman mechanic lives between running her family’s auto shop during the day and expressing her femininity at night, until an unforeseen event threatens the balance of her compartmentalized life.

  • Branded Content

    Revisiting BMW's Groundbreaking Branded Content Series "The Hire"

    BMW's legendary marketing campaign is returning after 14 years with a new film. We look back at the original 8 installments directed by A-list talent like Alejandro Gonzales Iñárritu, Ang Lee & Wong Kar Wai, which helped invent the concept of branded film.

  • Interview

    Interview with Jamie Travis (The Armoire)

    Toronto native Jamie Travis has been making short films for more than a decade. When he finally made the leap to features (his debut For a Good Time, Call… premiered at Sundance and will hit cinemas this fall), he gave shorts lovers everywhere a wonderful gift by releasing all his previous work online.

  • Article

    The Viral Experience: What Happens When You Reach The Top

    You’'ve seen the scenario before: some talented, young filmmaker releases his latest short film on Vimeo… and BOOM… practically overnight it goes viral. A few million views and a couple hundred thousand comments later, they garner industry attention, eventually cinching a movie deal with Hollywood.

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    Experimental Jamie Stuart

    Idiot with a Tripod

    The film Roger Ebert declared should win the Oscar, this video essay is a homage to Vertov's classic, "Man with a Movie Camera".

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