Short Film: WE WERE HARDLY MORE THAN CHILDREN, 9min., USA, Documentary

“We Were Hardly More Than Children” is an epic tale of a friend’s traumatic abortion; a deep hurt not remembered, but poignantly visible in her paintings.

Project Links

  • Film Type:Documentary, Experimental, Short
  • Genres:Experimental, Women, Narrative, Documentary
  • Runtime:8 minutes 45 seconds
  • Completion Date:March 7, 2019
  • Production Budget:1,000 USD
  • Country of Origin:United States
  • Country of Filming:United States
  • Film Language:English
  • Shooting Format:Digital
  • Aspect Ratio:16:9
  • Film Color:Color

Short Film: WELL DONE, 3min., USA, Comedy


Neil needs his co-worker BBQ to go off without a hitch in order for his boss to entrust him with the warehouse club membership. Then he will choose the SNACKS!

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Director Biography – Pegah Pasalar (SATURDAY)

Pegah Pasalar (born in 1992) is an Iranian interdisciplinary artist currently based in Chicago.


She received her bachelor’s degree from the Art University of Tehran majoring in cinema editing.


She is a full-merit scholarship awardee at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where she is pursuing a master of fine arts in studio with an emphasis in film and video.


The theme of her work is centered on the position of women in the family and society,social criticism of childhood and immigration,and the transitions and effects within interpersonal relationships.

Pegah is currently continuing to work on a series of short films, each titled after a day of the week. With the completion of the short film Sunday, she is now working on Saturday. Each of these works take place over the course of one day.

Director Statement

A family vacation ends in grief and unanswered questions…

Over View

Saturday, my latest film, a part of constellations of works each titled after a day of the week,is an evocation of the irregular, illogical and nonlinear process of grief at the loss of a child, and of the gap in time between the moment a traumatic event occurs and when it is perceived. As the viewer follows a joyful trip to the beach by a family with three young children, innocence and happiness give way to the unthinkable. While the day unfolds on-screen, the audience comes to realize, through subtle audiovisual cues, that a tragedy has occurred: one of the three children has drowned. Decisions are made in a state of shock, and the blurred lines between the rational and irrational interrupt and fragment the journey back home. The parents opt to bring their dead son back in the same car with the two other children pretending as if he is sleeping.

Saturday springs from the liminal space between the personal and the political. It is a response to the wars and strife that have engulfed the Middle East, and to the lived reality of an encounter with death. In an era, strife with refugees fleeing from frequent turmoil, a new generation is learning that the beauty of the sea is intertwined with its indifference and cruel force. The widely circulated image of Alan Kurdi, a child who drowned en route to Europe while escaping the Syrian War with his family, comes to mind. The film’s approach, though, is intimate and its focus is on the mundane.

While this experimental fiction short film is deeply personal and local to my own family in Iran, Saturday also focuses on a much broader complexity of human conditions. It depicts an alternative way of facing the immediate aftermath of trauma. One that pushes up against society’s prescribed behaviors and social norms and attempts to show that there is no one way, or correct way, to grieve. Saturday focuses in the universality of intergenerational differences,
of childhood and parenting, and on the altering states of denial, reality, and truth. It explores the relationships between life and death, death and sleep, smiling and weeping, paleness of color and saturation, whispering and shouting, proximity and distance. The film for the most part is depicted through little sister’s point of view, and so there the moments are shown in a
fragmented and non-conventional way.

Short Film: SATURDAY, 9min., USA/Iran, Drama

As the viewer follows a joyful trip to the beach by a family with three young children, innocence and happiness give way to the unthinkable. While the day unfolds on-screen, the audience comes to realize, through subtle audiovisual cues, that a tragedy has occurred: one of the three children has drowned. Decisions are made in a state of shock, and the blurred lines between the rational and irrational interrupt and fragment the journey back home. The parents opt to bring their dead son back in the same car with the two other children pretending as if he is sleeping.

Project Links

Short Film: RED THREAD, 3min., USA, Experimental

A red thread connects your destiny, but perhaps not the only one you find.

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News & Reviews

Director Biography – Ryan Matthew Jolly (LACUNA)

Born, March 22, 1996. Ryan Jolly started animating in early middle school. Always planning film ideas and character designs on the sides of notebooks. He loved to create stories and shared them on YouTube. After graduating college he took a job as a tutor, helping young animators with the same classes he had taken.

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Director Biography – Daniel John Harris (NOW AND NOT YET)

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Daniel John Harris is an award-winning filmmaker based in Chicago, IL. After serving six years as an artilleryman with the IL Army National Guard, he traded his cannon for a Canon to begin his career as a filmmaker and photographer.Director Statement

I think Springsteen put it best when he said artists are part fraudsters; liars in service of truth. This story isn’t my truth, but hopefully I have just enough empathy as a filmmaker to get it right. All my thanks and undying gratitude to my cast and crew, who were given a large task in a small amount of time, but executed flawlessly.

Short Film: ENJOY?, 3min., USA, Comedy/Parody

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A dark comedy about the student debt bubble and the people behind it.Director Biography – DAVE

Project Links

  • Film Type:Short, Student
  • Runtime:2 minutes 56 seconds
  • Completion Date:February 21, 2019
  • Production Budget:200 USD
  • Country of Origin:United States
  • Country of Filming:United States
  • Shooting Format:CL100
  • Aspect Ratio:16:9
  • Film Color:Color

Short Film: KING OF THE HOUSE, 11min., USA, Animation/Music

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A delusional man lives alone in a small dark house, believing that he is the king of the world and his supremacy is secure. However, his sovereignty is shaken by the arrival of a stranger. Little by little, this intruder occupies his living space, forces him to face his inner fears, cowardice and inferiority. Eventually, he realizes the great king he conjured in his tiny kingdom, is nothing but a pitiful tramp to the rest of the world.

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