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All People Arts 1st Annual Holiday Party

All People Arts is a nonprofit organization in Columbus, Oh that seeks to engage and unite the people on the South Side of Columbus and beyond in expressing, creating and experiencing art. This year All People Arts hosted their first annual holiday party. I had the honor and privilege of creating this video for the organization after speaking with one of it’s board members who expressed the mission of the group and invited me to attend. Below is the video I created to capture the essence of the their event.

Art, Film

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“Beyond Sleep” Award Winning Short Film at the Columbus Black International Film Festival 2019

I am very honored to have been awarded the Best Homegrown Short Film by the Columbus Black International Film Festival (CBIFF) 2019.  My entry this year is called “Beyond Sleep.” It’s about an educator who travels home on break to visit family and arrives as a relative enters crisis. He’s bound for an awakening.”

—>Watch Beyond Sleep <—

Film

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“Cricket Assassin” at the Columbus Black International Film Festival 2018 by Qew Production

 

I am honored that my short film “Cricket Assassin” was selected to be screened at the 2018 Columbus Black International Film Festival! I begin filming 5 weeks before the deadline and it was hard work to make it on time.  Hard work has paid off!

 

 

 

 

Film

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Columbus Black International Film Festival

It was an honor to be present at the 1st ever Columbus Black International Film Festival (2017) in Columbus, Ohio. A variety of talent was on display among the filmmakers and the event had a informative  workshop I was able to attend by the gifted Celia C. Peters, sci-fi writer and filmmaker. Overall the event  was inspiring for a filmmaker such as myself and I look forward to contributing to the next round of submissions for the festival.  

(Photo opps with Cristyn Steward, founder of Columbus Black International Film Festival, Celia Peters, writer and sci fi filmmaker and Keya Crenshaw, founder of Black Chick Media)

Film

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Behind the scenes short film: The Chip-Bot Program

Behind the scenes my concept for The Chip-Bot Program began many months ago. It was inspired by numerous headlines that flooded media of unarmed people being fatally shot and killed by police. Unarmed individuals were killed for petty offenses or sometimes no offense at all.  Internalizing this reality from a filmmakers perspective, I asked myself the infamous “What if?” What If robots or some kind of artificial intelligence were the enforcers of the land? Would correct and equal justice be spread evenly amongst citizens then? Would the headlines stop? But what about the human element involved in artificial intelligence? The Chip-Bot Program explores this variable in a society where technology is initially designed to remedy the errors of humanity. Production began for my sci fi short film The Chip-Bot Program in October of 2016.

Check out behind the scenes video footage below with some of the cast (coming soon).

Subscribe at Qew Flicks for updates on my next short film.

To view this Qew Production movie click the computer chip:

ComputerChipLink

 

Columbus 48 Hour Film Project

“What is the 48 Hour Film Project?
It’s your chance to stop talking and start filming! The premise? Filmmaking teams have just one weekend to make a short film. All creativity—writing, shooting, editing and adding a musical soundtrack—must occur in a 48 hour window beginning Friday evening at 7:00pm and ending Sunday at 7:00pm. The following week, the completed films are screened to an eager audience.”

Qew Production represented at the 2016 Columbus 48 Hour Film Project and was 1 of 34 teams that participated. The short films were featured at Gate Film Center. This is my 3rd year participating in the 48 HFP and thus far my best. I’ve learned a lot over the last few years as I continue to grow as a filmmaker. One of the biggest things I’ve learned is that it is okay to have help. I’m very used to wearing all the hats on a production and the perfectionist side of me has been okay with this. However, this year I had help with recording sound and it really freed me up to focus on what I like to do more, be a director!

Another thing I did that helped was keeping my cast to a minimum. Overall this proved to be more efficient. Creating a story was simpler because we know we had a small cast to work with. It was easier to manage a smaller number of people as opposed to larger groups I’ve had in the past. Last but not least it was more cost efficient when trying to take care of cast and crew, less mouths to feed, lol!

In closing, I was very pleased to have the team I had this year and the camaraderie we shared in completing our film “The Longest Round” for the 48 Hour Film Project. The 48 HFP has been a wonderful trial by fire opportunity and experience for me to learn filmmaking. I recommend it to all budding filmmakers!