Pat’s Boys” by Ambrus Hernádi

Logline: A documentary about three brothers who run a petrol and service station in Queens, NY. The fim examines this unique working environment as a home to discussing economic and global issues, migration, and the idea of family legacy.

Ambrus Hernádi, originally from Budapest, studied film theory and worked on feature productions as a camera assistant. His desire to tell real life stories led him to The New School’s Documentary Studies program.


“The Weight of the Sky” by Uwa Iduozee

Logline: Growing up in East New York, 10-year old Allyssa creates her own fantastical universe to escape the pressures of reality as she witnesses her single father Artrell struggling with unemployment and childhood trauma.

Uwa Iduozee is a Finnish-Nigerian filmmaker & cinematographer with a passion for intimate, character-driven visual storytelling. Before moving to New York, he has worked for the Finnish Broadcasting Company.


“The Newcomers Club” by Tyche Zhuge

Logline: M.S.131 middle school in Chinatown has the largest number of Chinese immigrant students in Manhattan. Following three such students, this documentary provides a glimpse into the challenges they face and the process of adjusting to their new surroundings.

Tyche Zhuge is a woman, a Chinese, a rebel, an advocate, a life- time social worker, an artist and an admirer of all the creativeness on this planet.


Plenty” by Catharina Schürenberg

Logline: A visual meditation on the process of recycling in a capitalist economy. From micro to macro, Plenty makes hidden processes visible and challenges our understanding of eco-friendliness.

Catharina Schürenberg, born in Germany and now based in New York, is a filmmaker whose work focuses on social and environmental issues. Over the last 7 years she has worked in the wardrobe and art department on numerous Film and TV productions including the award winning documentary “Casting JonBenet”.


“Falling Forward” by Caroline Macfarlane

Logline: Caroline sets out to make a film about one of New York City’s most eccentric characters Jane Marx. Along the way, the filmmaker and subject discover they have much more in common, including the loss of a brother. This film is an unusual and colorful portrait of friendship, aging and living life amidst death.

Caroline Macfarlane is an artist, filmmaker and urbanist from Toronto, Canada. After working as director of Ignite gallery at OCAD University (Toronto), she moved to New York City to obtain an MS in Design and Urban Ecologies and a Graduate Certificate in Documentary Studies at The New School.


“SUPER” by Callie Rose Hanau

Logline: This film follows one of New York’s unsung heroes as he struggles to maintain an apartment building in a rapidly changing neighborhood.

Callie Rose Hanau is a New York based creative with proud Pittsburgh roots. Currently, she is a production intern with Meerkat Media, where she is working on projects centered around social and economic justice.


“La Lupita” by Maria Mayo

Logline: When her mother is diagnosed with an illness, Maria travels across the country to be by her side. Blending personal and historical, the film shows how mutual wounds have the power to forge the strongest bonds.

Maria Mayo is a Xicana from California, currently working on her second documentary exploring womyn breaking the taboo that surrounds ancestral spiritual beliefs and reclaiming bruja feminism.


“Poetry of Light” by Rebekka Raffnsdottir

Logline: This essay film is an exploration of the difference between nonverbal and verbal existence, and the way language and our internal nature influences our ways of seeing.

Rebekka Rafnsdóttir is an Icelandic writer and a filmmaker based in Brooklyn, New York. Her work is rooted in philosophy and literature, although you will find traces from all creative arts in her experimental streams of consciousness.


Hello BETTY” by Julia Mann

Logline: As BETTY – a feminist pop rock a cappella trio – approaches its 34th year together, band members Alyson Palmer, Amy Ziff, and Elizabeth Ziff look back at their intertwined lives. After 3+ decades of highs, lows, and everything in between, BETTY continues to rock, roll, and inspire.

Julia Mann was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, and recently moved back to the US after three years in Tel Aviv, Israel. Julia’s lifelong interest in documentary storytelling led her to courses at several film schools. She currently works as a production assistant for the award-winning producer and director Eden Wurmfeld.


The Wizard of Williamsburg” by Zoe Hutton

Logline: The film follows one very surprising New Yorker as he attempts to modernize magic for millennials and find his tribe in the process.

Zoe Hutton began her career at the BBC in London, working on social issue films. In 2018, she came to New York thanks to the Fulbright Alistair Cooke Award in Journalism, which has confirmed for her the magic of filmmaking – in more ways than one.