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STUCK
BIASED
MY NAME IS MOE
SOMETHING BEHIND THE WALLS
COKE BOYS
THE CROOK AND THE CREEK
THE MANAGER POSITION
AND THE HEAVENS MUST HAVE CRIED
L’AUTRE RIVE
L’autre rive takes on the issue of homelessness and Montreal serves as the setting. The story is framed up against the 2020 decimation of a
STUCK
Simplicity is key. Filmmaker David Roncone seems to abide by that motto as his short horror film, Stuck, is as basic as it gets. This
BIASED
Writer and director Andrea Lwin’s Biased boldly asks the question: what if renting in Los Angeles could get even MORE egregious? Closely following the sudden
MY NAME IS MOE
Young filmmaker Kabir McNeely’s short, My Name Is Moe, gradually grows in resonance until it arrives at an unexpectedly poignant conclusion. Sensitively dealing with serious
SOMETHING BEHIND THE WALLS
Something Behind The Walls is a visually beautiful thriller — making great use of its 1936 small-town setting — in the context of an overly
COKE BOYS
Props to filmmaker Omar Cook for multitasking. He writes, co-produces, edits, shoots, co-directs, and stars in the latest crime short Coke Boys. Sure, the 20-minute
THE CROOK AND THE CREEK
Commendable for its production values and an acute sense of pacing, Bruce Wabbit and Sohaib Syed’s The Crook and the Creek touches upon something truly
THE MANAGER POSITION
Want to see a film that speaks to a situation so many of us have been in? Craig Trow’s The Manager Position is so quickly
AND THE HEAVENS MUST HAVE CRIED
And The Heavens Must Have Cried takes place in the Summer of 1968, and follows Charles Manson and four of the women who fell under