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Short Films from Young Boston

  • A House Where You Grew Up

    Directed by Ted Rogers.
    US, 2011, digital video, color, 19 min.
    Copy source: Filmmaker

Directed and photographed by Ted Rogers in his hometown of New Milford, Connecticut, the film is constructed by the small, clumsy moments experienced by a twenty-one-year-old student returning to his childhood home, trying to figure out his relationship to his old friends and the stark rural landscape.

  • People Parade

    Directed by Chris Maggio and John Wilson.
    US, 2011, digital video, color, 25 min.
    Copy source: Filmmakers

After the star of a long-running variety show passes away, his son is obligated to reunite a weathered cast of television performers and host the final episode. Retired illusionists, singing cowboys and Peruvian daredevils adorn the stage as the new host protects his father's legacy from a bungling step dad. Caught somewhere in between variety and verité, People Parade is the tale of a new generation paying testament to its predecessor as well as the death of conventional genres.

  • Human Geography 

    Directed by Misha Spivack.
    US, 2011, digital video, color, 44 min.
    Copy source: Filmmaker

The film tells the story of a young man who follows a girl from Boston to New York. The film maps the intertwined and complex network of connections, casual friendships and love-triangles that keep Alex a perpetual arm's length away from Nyle.

Part of film series

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Four Films From Young Boston

Current and upcoming film series

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