Latest Sci-Fi Script, GLITCH, Official Selection in the Destiny City Film Festival
Glitch is a timely and pertinent exploration of gaps in health equity, impacts of corporate med tech, and the risks people take to survive. Maeve, a clever cosmetic gene editor, is faced with a do-or-die decision when she can’t afford basic care for a deadly disease.
So excited to announce that my latest script, Glitch, was selected for the Destiny City Film Festival! It was the fourth place winner in the competition.
Glitch is a timely and pertinent exploration of gaps in health equity, impacts of corporate med tech, and the risks people take to survive. Maeve, a clever cosmetic gene editor, is faced with a do-or-die decision when she can’t afford basic care for a deadly disease.
Many thanks are also owed to Hollywood Just4Shorts and the International Horror and Sci-Fi Festival in Phoenix, Arizona that made the script an award-winner and finalist, respectively. And to Zedfest Film Festival and Screenwriting Competition, which awarded GLITCH as a semi-finalist.
The script is an unoptioned spec / TV pilot, so hit me up if you’re interested. :)
More to come!
All Girls Film Challenge 2015: Panel Discussion (VIDEO)
The Puget Sound All Girls Film Challenge is a yearly competition in which young women create 2-4 minute films on a chosen theme. They also feature screenings, panels, networking events, and a summer camp. I recently sat on a panel for a great discussion on young women making careers for themselves in film.
I recently sat on a panel for a great discussion on young women making careers for themselves in film.
The Puget Sound All Girls Film Challenge is a yearly competition in which young women create 2-4 minute films on a chosen theme. They also feature screenings, panels, networking events, and a summer camp. Their goal is to "give young women filmmakers in the Puget Sound area the opportunity to create films that showcase their perspective, juried by experienced women filmmakers and screened at high profile, high quality events that help to connect our students with women in the media industry."
Special thanks to Northwest Film Forum for hosting this event and to my co-panelists:
Ruchika Tulshyan - Forbes, Seattle Globalist
Lindy Boustedt - First Sight Productions
Tay and Val - Dreams Unlimited Media
Stefanie Malone - NFFTY
Nancy Chang - Reel Grrls
Eli Kimaro - 9 Elephants Productions
Ines Grossi - Independent Filmmaker
Marisa Vitiello - Adobe Youth Voices
Malory Graham - Adobe Youth Voices
Ilona Rossman Ho - Canine Productions
Courtney Sheehan - Northwest Film Forum
Jemely and Jeremy Jayme - Deadwringer Productions
Take a peek at the video below:
A New Adventure
It’s almost unbelievable that in less that 48 hours I’ll be on a plane headed to a completely different country, continent, season, and hemisphere. Just yesterday I graduated from Pacific Lutheran University, following in the same steps of Edwin and the others. It is surreal to be beginning a new challenge so suddenly. I have my passport and my itinerary. I have a phone with a Namibian number and power adaptors; these are the mundanities that make it real. So, I know I’m not imagining things.
I am so fortunate and privileged to have this opportunity, and I only hope that I can learn from their life histories and I can help to tell their story respectfully. Filmmaking has always been a love of mine, and I think it is necessary to do so with social justice at the heart of it. That is the power of documentary film that I find so arresting – the power to help make the world a little more thoughtful and contemplative.
Nothing gets me more impassioned than a meaningful story. I still remember when Joanne asked me if I wanted to be a part of this thing. She knows how to make the pitch. She makes the hardest work sound phenomenal (and it usually is!). I am not one to turn down an adventure like the one I am about to embark on. This is the stuff independent filmmakers dream of.
When I think about the obstacles that The Nine faced I know there are few stories that are more meaningful to us now than equity, education, and social change. I never faced the realities of coming of age in a newly independent country that codified laws keeping Black Namibians out of higher education. However, I am not so naive to think that the United States has not had similar legal structures in place to disadvantage those of darker skin. After all, it’s not that long ago that the Brown v. Board of Education case was heard in our Supreme Court. We still feel the aftermath of education tracking even now in this country. This is a story not only meaningful to Namibia, but all over the world.
So, no pressure.
I am feeling a lot of excitement mixed with a healthy dose of self-doubt. No complex storytelling project dependent upon technological and narrative skills is devoid of that. But I do know that nothing beats a hardworking, committed, enthusiastic, and open-minded team. And my fellow filmmakers have those qualities in spades.
Here’s to 20+ hours of plane travel, jet lag, learning, and a lot of the unknown.
❤ Andrea
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This Post Originally Appeared on the Namibia Nine blog.