Aaron Schimberg has always had a personal interest in facial disfigurement. The New York–based writer-director was born with a bilateral cleft lip and palate, along with other medical issues, and has spent the majority of his filmmaking career grappling with people’s perception of him. Much of that has manifested into his bold and sharp-witted filmography, which has considered questions about his place in the world and the ways cinema has shaped prejudice and attitudes toward disfigurement. “I write these films as therapy in some sense,” Schimberg tells Filmmaker. “It’s an ineffective form of therapy because I get done with them […]
Born and raised outside of Raleigh, North Carolina, Caitlyn Greene moved to New York City the summer after graduating from UNC-Chapel Hill with a degree in photojournalism. Her first job was as an assistant editor on Tomorrow We Disappear, “a totally indie” feature documentary about an artist colony in New Delhi facing eviction. Once she realized that editing made her “very employable,” she began consistently working on nonfiction shorts and branded content. It’s been a professional path that, over a decade, has led to her own debut feature, the environmental-themed documentary The River, currently in “early to mid-production.” Greene’s first […]
Four zoomers get into a car and hit the road, quickly settling into the familiar rhythms of longtime friends catching, but eventually notice that a promised bend in the road never arrived. When they stop, a screaming, zombie-like horde emerges from the woods, so they hit the gas and keep driving. Night turns to day and hours to weeks as the group struggles to understand what’s happening and why—or, at least, adapt to the uncanny new situation. Similarly, viewers of It Ends (a title that niftily acts as a promise) are taken on a continuously surprising journey that toys with, […]
Joel Alfonso Vargas’s breakthrough 2020 short, Target Is Hiring, has as its leads two “showtime” kids who breakdance mid-car while blasting their own music, a familiar NYC subway routine that generally unfolds before indifferent or outright hostile everyday commuters. This year’s Que te vaya bonita, Rico (May It Go Beautifully for You, Rico) similarly first identifies its main character by an occupation specific to the city. Rico (Juan Collado) hawks nutcracker cocktails (a mixture of liquor and fruit juice heavy on the latter) on the beach and lives at home with his mother (Yohanna Florentino) and sister (Nathaly Navarro). The […]
Growing up in Barbados in the 1980s, “It was very easy to feel like you were on the outside of everything. Getting access to art from elsewhere was really challenging,” says Jason Fitzroy Jeffers, remembering the bootleg video store in a shipping container full of last year’s Hollywood releases he’d visit, or the marked-up copies of The Source he’d buy to read about Public Enemy, Nas and A Tribe Called Quest. Local history, such as the fact that the Caribbean “was almost a staging ground for the Cold War,” was, for a teenager, even more elusive. “You would hear whispers […]
Nolam Plaas was acting in a production of Lydia R. Diamond’s Toni Stone at San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theater, which unfortunately had its opening night scheduled for March 5, 2020. “It was an opening night/closing night kind of thing,” remembers Plaas, who headed back home to New Orleans when COVID shut down the production. “I said to myself, ‘This is a watershed moment. Either I’m going to make something, or I’m always going to be subject to outside forces that I can’t control.’ That’s when I started getting really serious about writing.” More bad luck, however, befell Plaas’s first effort, […]
Director Carin Leong’s narrative short film debut, Ghost Town, “never went anywhere,” she says, “and it’s nowhere online. It was kind of my love letter to Singapore and all the changes I’ve seen there over the years. [Making it] was therapeutic for me. It didn’t do anything for me careerwise, and I didn’t expect it to.” A casual moment on the set of that film, however, planted the seed for Leong’s ambitious and elegantly realized climate-themed documentary short Sandcastles, a Field of Vision production that premiered this year at SXSW. Her producer turned to her one shoot day and said, […]
A true one-man production, Bay of Herons begins by presenting an anti-colonialist take on Gluskap, a creator character of the Wabanaki peoples, the Indigenous confederacy the Mi’kmaq nation is a member of. Mi’kmaq tribe member Jared James Lank “filmed, edited, scored and captioned” the short, which uses subtitles to tell a story about Gluskap attempting to fend off French colonialists and then never returning. Hundreds of years having passed since this standoff, the subtitles yield to a narrator who sends up a prayer for strength to Gluskap all the same. Shots from Maine’s Mackworth Island capture the area, which is […]
Eli Powers’ unsettling Exuma depicts an asphalt plant worker rapidly spiraling out of control as he waits for an urgent call he can’t afford to miss. His frantic futzing for his phone while working alone on top of a gigantic structure results in him dropping it down a dark hole; searching for it, he finds himself accidentally locked inside the dark pit of this steel hell as his phone continues to vibrate. The man eventually breaks out but appears almost comatose as he continues about his work—that is, before he takes a few gulps of yellow paint right out of […]
“I’ve discovered that the only way you get to make a film is if you’ve already made a film,” a disillusioned young producer—a low-level employee moonlighting from his day job at an arthouse distributor—says to a first-time director in Julian Castronovo’s forthcoming debut feature. The filmmaker he is speaking to is also named Julian Castronovo, and the film the young producer is failing to get financed bears a sideways resemblance to the one we’re watching. Dealing with the search for a disappeared art forger, the movie the on-screen Castronovo pitches is an ambitious hybrid dealing with “the discourse of authenticity” […]