Theresa Wylie

Carved from a lifetime of experience that runs the gamut from incarceration to liberation, Dog Eat Dog is the story of three men who are all out of prison and now have the task of adapting themselves to civilian life.

4.7/10
5%

Joe Toy, on the verge of adolescence, finds himself increasingly frustrated by his single father, Frank's attempts to manage his life. Declaring his freedom once and for all, he escapes to a clearing in the woods with his best friend, Patrick, and a strange kid named Biaggio. He announces that they are going to build a house there, free from responsibility and parents. Once their makeshift abode is finished, the three young men find themselves masters of their own destiny, alone in the woods.

7.1/10
7.5%

This is the story of an 11-year-old boy whose derby dreams are left in pieces when his soldier father is killed in Afghanistan. The boy teams up with a father figure whose own son, a firefighter, died in the line of duty, and the two help each other find redemption and revive the derby.

6/10

UNWAVERING is a faith-based film that tells the story of a girl who is in present day captivity with her peers being held at an abandoned warehouse by a terrorist group. As Sarah (Katie C'etta), the main character, is tested and struggles to stay true to her faith she also has flashbacks from her childhood, her first love, getting engaged, and the event that reveals how she was captured. UNWAVERING is a mix of loving memories, intense emotional situations, and on the edge of your seat suspense.

5.9/10

Clearview Incorporated has perfected backward time travel, and is ready to send people BACK IN TIME. So far customers seem reticent. Is it the cost? The risk? The company offers a special promotional gig where people can go back to a key moment in their lives, and hopefully make peace with that moment in some way. Twenty-one regrets were submitted anonymously by real people and then performed and elaborated on by improvisational actors who played the people desperate to travel back to that one moment. The short film is a meditation on memory and regret and the ways that it keeps on shaping our lives.

6.7/10