A curious student reporter discovers found-footage of two Yale seniors recording their secret society initiation going wrong.
Award-winning short film for the Yale Cinemat's 24-Hour Film Festival. Won Best Picture and Best Editing.
Conceptualizing Venice as a heterotopia in Jean Baudrillard's Simulacra and Simulation, this short won the Casa Muraro's Emerging Filmmaker Award.
A young silent film actress/journalist investigates fraudulent
prototypes of the first talking film technology recorded at Yale. As she
uncovers the truth, the line between reality and illusion begins to blur,
forcing her to confront the power of cinema itself.
Work for Professor Neta Alexander's course "What is Television?". The video essay frames immersion as a keyword and present a 3-pronged framework to understand television's ability to immerse viewers by analyzing I Saw the TV Glow and "San Junipero" from Black Mirror.
Work for Professor Ximena López Carrillo's course "Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, and the U.S. Empire". The film centers Indigenous Mexican women of the Wixárika community and Palestinian women as they resist through the practice of cross-stitching.
Created background video of footage for Astronomy Department promotional material using Houdini and After Effects.
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