Supernatural entities spawned from a long defunct steel mill prompt quirky locals in a nearby town to confront their personal shortcomings in a nod to properties like The Twilight Zone and Twin Peaks.
My grandfather Tuiu decides for the second time to leave his house and start a life elsewhere, he lives with the street hardships, and the fact of leaving is linked to the depredation of that place.
Two young adults reflect on their fathers' lives stuck in a cyclical time loop. As the couple reflects on their fathers, Charlotte uncovers the pain behind her relationship with her dad.
When his roommate announces a plan to move away, a wannabe screenwriter attempts to balance crafting his hard-to-explain new story and a realistic plan for his own future. After a sleepless night and a strange trip into the forest, those lines begin to blur.
Three Greek intellectuals gather for the Great Summoning, a mysterious phenomenon that may take days to manifest. While they wait, they attempt to figure out what to do for the time being.
In the first in a new trilogy that follows on from Time Stops Moving and Time Always Moving, Adam begins to reveal a time that involved a kiss and a lie- a time he tries to forget. Starring Jane Hogan as “Julie”, Lee Neville as “Adam” and Danielle Little as “Anna”.
Time inevitably moves from past to future, passing the present moment. Mankind encloses to time its marks, stains and ruins. On the verge of vast changes time acts abnormally. It leaks, folds and fractures, allowing things belonging elsewhere, to the otherworldly, to permeate itself. In the 8mm...
A mind-twisting time-lapse beginning on a hill just outside town, doing for the concept of time what Charles and Ray Eames's 1968 film The Powers of Ten did for space. One billion years in two minutes.
In the second in a trilogy of short films that follow Time Stops Moving and Time Always Moving, and continue where Three Times Moving: The Kiss Through Time left off- Anna confronts Julie on her contradictory lies and love for Adam. Starring Jane Hogan as “Julie”, Lee Neville as “Adam”...
Zoë's encounter with a vintage clock triggers a profound exploration of grief and acceptance following the sudden loss of her friend, Teddy. Through her journey, she discovers that true healing lies in embracing the memories they shared and finding comfort in the present, rather than attempting to...