film essay
Love, Laughter and a Little Chaos: Making You, Me & Her as a Husband-Wife Filmmaking Duo
Writer-director-producer Dan Levy Dagerman on the ins and outs of collaborating with his wife, actor-writer-producer Selina Ringel.
Sometimes You Can Jump From a 10-Story Building and Land in a Thimble
Filmmaker Max Rissman, whose supernatural drama Upon Waking is out tomorrow, on the innumerable challenges one has to overcome on a film.
Time Stop
Killer of Men writer-director Tzvi on the magical way that great cinema plays with time, creating a different kind of time travel ...
My Semester at Shermer High School
Exactly 40 years to the day since its release, Julia Marchese pays personal tribute to her favorite movie of all time, The Breakfast Club.
From New Girl to Bookworm: How High School Loneliness Sparked My Love for Storytelling
Wish You Were Here actress-producer Gabby Kono-Abdy on how finding solace in books sparked a lifelong love of stories, and her current career.
How A Group of “Dumb Americans” Made One of the First Ever Horror Movies Shot in Albania
Producers Justin Martell, Matt Manjourides and Seager Dixon share the deeply unlikely story of filming the 2020 remake of Castle Freak.
How I Lost My Face
Writer-director Sasha Rainbow on masks, identity, her toxic ex-boyfriend and her new feature, the body horror Grafted.
On Losing It All and Gaining Back My Voice
Veteran producer Summer Shelton details her intimate journey making her debut feature as actor-writer-director, the romantic drama You & I.
Letters from Girls Town
As indie classic Girls Town hits theaters in a new 4K restoration, its director and one of its stars reckon with its current place in the world
Revisited: Neurodiversity is the Fucking Coolest Thing in the World
Director Amber Sealey on OCD, ADHD and the personal growth she achieved making her new movie, Out of My Mind, now streaming on Disney+.
Revisited: Filmmaking and Fatherhood: Five Years Later
Writer-director Joel Potrykus, whose film Vulcanizadora premiered at Tribeca 2024, on life with his son, Solo.
What’s Worth Saving
Sally Aitken pens a timely and poignant essay on Los Angeles, the setting for her new documentary, Every Little Thing.











