5 Questions with Tynan DeLong

“I really wanted to do something with my good friend's dog, Marti, who is one of my favorite dogs around. I had been dogsitting him a lot last year while my buddy was out of town, so the basis for the short came from that experience. Then I found a throw pillow that said "I'd Rather Drink Wine and Pet My Dog" and finally, the short was ready for production.”

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5 Questions with Clay Tatum

“I remember saying to myself, "I really got to get serious about this jacking off movie". So after The Golden One, I made it a point to figure this short out and it wasn't until I added the "haunted house" aspect of the short for me to finally feel the need to write and make it.”

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5 Questions with Jesse de Rocquigny

“I grew up in a rural town outside of Winnipeg, Manitoba, a pretty modest town with not a lot going on. I begged my mom to get me a camcorder from Sears, and my buddies and I would hang out and film dumb videos, we'd play assassins with airsoft guns and chase each other on snowmobiles, normal prairie kid stuff.”

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5 Questions with Emily Ann Hoffman

“I had been curious to try live-action filmmaking for a while and I was honestly pretty burnt out on animation after making “Nevada.” The impetus for this film came about in the long and continuous aftermath of the 2016 election. I was dealing with some health issues and was feeling exhausted by the desire to fight.”

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5 Questions with Eleanore Pienta

“In no particular order: 1) The idea of a woman walking into a store and breaking everything on the display table, after having a pleasant interaction with the shop-person. 2) Being a competitive walker, unbeknownst to the other “competitors” (i.e. pedestrians).”

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5 Questions with Jordan Michael Blake

“When I was nine, I wanted a PalmPilot for Christmas because I thought they were really cool, but when I realized it didn't do anything, I got super bummed. The next year, I asked for a camera, and that went way better for me. RIP my PalmPilot alternate future. Also, I grew up Mormon.”

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5 Questions with Peter Molesworth

“I knew when I started that I wanted to write a story that wrestled with gender, most crucially, one that examined emotional labor, that questioned whether strength has a gender, and presented in an acute manner the suffering that occurs under the codified gender norms we all adhere to.”

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5 Questions with Lizzy Sanford

“I'm interested in the passive competition that often develops between sisters, and whether that is an innate female quality or something societally enforced - or both. Of course not all sister relationships are the same, but you can be ruthlessly mean to a sibling and its generally acceptable.”

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5 Questions with Lydia Cornett and Jenny Groza

“We were intrigued by what Mina described as the parallel experiences of Ismat and Narmin—both women are obligated to spend time in situations that are outside their cultural and social comfort zones. As women co-directors, we wanted to make a film that could portray the unique bonds of grandmothers, mothers, and daughters.”

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5 Questions with Alessandra Lacorazza

‘I think it’s particularly interesting in the latinx community where mental health is still so stigmatized and access to healthcare is limited and yet culturally there is the assumption that you will put yourself aside for your family. Yet as a teen or young adult all you want to do is be carefree, self-centered and anything but responsible.”

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5 Questions with Emily Kaplan

“Both Nona and I had a clear idea of the look and feel based on the script - big sky country mixed with the neon lights of America's strip malls… The main character is always searching for a hit, so it was important to navigate the world through her eyes.”

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5 Questions with Arielle Goldman

“I thought how truly amazing it is that women can undergo such an intimately physical and deeply personal experience all whilst running countries, working demanding jobs, caring for our families, and defying whatever level of pain and exhaustion currently consumes our bodies once a month.”

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5 Questions with Ashley Kron

“In 7th grade I won $150 from a poster contest, and I used the money to buy a video camera. I started making films whenever I could—for class projects, at sleepovers, with the kids I was babysitting. It gave me a newfound agency to interact with people that as a kid, I was constantly seeking.”

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5 Questions with Francesca Pazniokas

“I interviewed a variety of bi/pan/queer people about their experiences living in a world that often expects a very strict binary of “straight” or “gay.” It’s something that routinely frustrates me in my day to day life, so I figured I wasn’t alone. I asked them: ‘What rules do you feel others expect you to follow, and what rules do you create for yourself?’”

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