Showcase of the best FILMS in the world today.
Audience Award Winners:
Best Feature Film: IN THE NAME OF TOMORROW
Best Short Film: LA GALERIE
Best Direction: WE DANCE
Best Cinematography: TURNED TO STONE
Best Sound & Music: THINGS SHE WANTS
Best Performances: ELIXIR
Watch the Audience Feedback Video for each film:
IN THE NAME OF TOMORROW, 69min., Lebanon
Directed by Celine Abyad Beader
In a world that is screaming, bleeding, and trying to heal, when nothing makes sense, as we collectively feel deceived and almost delusional…
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!

ELIXIR, 10min,. Canada
Directed by Jean-Marc Abela
After the recent break up of a longterm relationship, Maeve must move through nostalgia and pain to find herself again.
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!

WE DANCE, 12min., USA
Directed by Ethan Payne, Brian Foster
From the world renowned Wideman-Davis Dance Company and award-winning filmmakers Ethan Payne and Brian Foster, We Dance is a love story, deconstructed and distilled into its most elemental ingredients. Dreams. Memories. Family.
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!

LA GALERIE, 11min., Canada
Directed by Loup-William Théberge
During a nighttime visit to a museum, an unforeseen connection between a woman and a painting triggers an unexpected journey between the real and the unreal.
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!

THINGS SHE WANTS, 3min., Canada
Directed by Kevin Andrew Heslop
An interpretation of the prose poem by Paola Ferrante which explodes marriage and explores the lived experience of intimate partner violence.
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!

TURNED TO STONE, 14min,. USA
Directed by Sarah Konner, Austin Selden
A dance horror fairytale. Inside an imaginative queer colorful landscape is space to consider how violent actions are passed from one to another, how different versions of ourselves create our stories, and what natural landscapes may be trying to teach us in post-capitalist worlds. Infatuation with pleasure both leads to depth of experience and connection, but potentially also a loss of connection with the beings and world around us.
WATCH HERE – The audience feedback video of the film!
CLICK HERE and see full info and more pics of the film!
