WORKS IN PROGRESS

REAPING 101 (One Hour, Fantasy / Action)

In an alternate Earth where magic is commonplace and a person’s success in society is based on the nature of their power and how far back their family can trace their magical lineage, a college student with a secret identity gets dragged into his professor’s side gig as a magical powers loan shark–an extremely illegal and dangerous practice.

THE REGULARS (One Hour, Horror / Action)

A woman running away from the paramilitary cult she was born in purchases a rundown bar hoping to quietly make a living and stay under the radar, unaware that the bar is a gathering spot for the spirits of the dead to air their grievances and get one last “treat” from the owner–the only person they can communicate with–before they pass on.

GHOSTS IN THE MACHINE (One Hour, Sci-fi / Action)

A fixer in a destroyed world with only a rogue AI that knows his true self. A cop that still tries to maintain law & order even when the concept doesn’t exist anymore. A long-lost brother arriving unexpectedly, and a city that’s always on one step away from joining the ashes of the past.

THE GOLDEN YEARS (One Hour, Family Drama)

Money is always thicker than blood, and he learned that the hard way after he won the biggest lottery prize in history when he was barely 18. But the family always comes crawling back when the cash runs out. It’s time they figured out what exactly their greed has cost them.

UNDER THE COUNTER (Feature, Family Drama / Action)

After having cut all ties to her old life as a de facto member of her father’s motorcycle club to be an upstanding citizen and go to law school, a young woman has to return to her roots when she finds out her father has died and the family bar that functions as the club’s HQ is about to go under.

ONE-HOUR DRAMAS

BLOOD ORANGES (Action / Crime)

A fixer for a recently immigrated Italian mob family is tasked with tracking down her boss’ daughter, who’s gone missing somewhere in New York City, only to find her dead. As she looks into what happened, nothing ends up being what it seems—not even what she thought she knew about her own life.

THE FRACTURED PIECES (Historical Espionage / Based on a True Story)

When a tight-knit family loses a cherished brother Fascist Italy during WWI, his younger sister sets off to discover who exposed him for belonging to the underground partisan resistance.

THE SANCTUARY (Sci-fi / Fantasy)

An intergalactic mission to hide a metaphysical anomaly that brings to life myths and legends on Earth is jeopardized when a man on the run from his criminal family stumbles upon it.

THESE GREY WALLS (Crime / Revenge)

A wife kills her abusive husband and frames their daughter for the murder. The daughter spends her years in jail with a single-minded plan for when she’s finally out: payback. But is that what she truly wants?

SHADES (Action / Family Drama)

When a military veteran with PTSD has to return to civilian life to take care of his ailing mother, he’s forced to reevaluate his priorities when he’s confronted with surprise fatherhood, especially since he hasn’t been as “retired” from his old job as he’s made everyone believe.

FEATURE FILMS

CRIMSON BEACH (Mystery / Action / Romance)

After the implosion of yet another romantic relationship, a medical examiner on the spectrum is strong-armed by her friends into going on vacation with them, where she accidentally gets dragged into a vice detective’s messy undercover investigation.

VINDICTA (Historical / Mystery / Action)

A young English Duchess in the 13th Century with a very unusual upbringing must find the culprit of her family’s murder using all the wit and resourcefulness in her arsenal.

Thinking of the Past

There were ghosts in the rocks. This was the first thought I had as I looked down from my father’s shoulders after the long climb up the slippery stone stairway of Stone Mountain Park in Georgia. The rocks were grey, rounded and strange shapes, and they had holes in them. Large, round eyes that looked straight at me. Just as if ghosts had been trapped in the stones. That was so cool. I remember clambering down and going to explore. I always did that when I went somewhere with my parents. I always went ahead of them. Stopped, looked around, and then yelled back: “It’s ok! It’s safe! You can come too!” I fashioned myself the intrepid explorer, protecting my parents from unseen dangers in the path ahead.

Of all the places I have been to, Stone Mountain stands out to me in my memories. It’s not really something you expect to see in the outskirts of Atlanta. It’s a giant grey rock that sticks out from the greenery around it like a sore thumb. It’s so large you can see it clearly from an airplane. On one of its sides are carved the faces of men whose names I can’t remember. It’s the same side that we faced when we sat on a large field to see the fireworks show one 4th of July. It was my family’s first “place”. It was the adventure of every weekend and the unknown land that I had to explore anew each time I went back. It was my favorite playground. One of my biggest goals at the time was to grow old enough to climb up the stone stairway by myself. To not need my father’s shoulders anymore.

Thinking about it today, it was probably just another park, nothing that special to anyone else, but, to me, it will always remain magical. From the stone ghosts, to the imposing men on the side of the rock, to the mysterious lady who entered a secret room in a secret tower and played an organ that you heard from yards away, it remains in my mind as a place where I learned how to dream. It was the first park we visited in the first place we lived when we moved to the United States in 1996. We only stayed in Georgia three years before we moved and I have never been back.

Since then, I have travelled all over the place, very often stopping for layovers in the airport of Atlanta, but I have never ventured outside. I can still see the Mountain every time I look out the window while my plane is taking off, carrying me towards my next destination. But it never seems like a good time to venture out of the airport and see if all is as it once was. I wonder if those ghosts are still there, frozen in stone forever. Or if there is even a lady still playing the organ for no one but herself. I don’t know if I’ll ever know.

We move forwards in time and in place when some of the best memories that we have are behind us. I am not sure why it is so difficult to relive them and find the same peace that we had before. Maybe it’s that we are afraid that the memories we hold dear from when we were children will be tainted or changed if we see them through the eyes of an adult. Or maybe we like to clutch desperately onto the memory of that time, hoping that one day we will be able to look back and be happy with the journey we have undertaken. I guess I’ll never know that either.