Letitia Wright's "Highway To The Moon" to Premiere at HollyShorts Film Festival
Letitia Wright’s "Highway To The Moon" premieres at HollyShorts as a tender, dreamlike debut celebrating the inner lives of young Black boys.
Letitia Wright’s "Highway To The Moon" premieres at HollyShorts as a tender, dreamlike debut celebrating the inner lives of young Black boys.
Horror is a genre that has frequently exploited women's bodies. This is usually done by objectifying them, but now horror films are also using older women's bodies as a vehicle for shock value and disgust.
A rational mind can’t always make sense of an emotional loss, as Etzu Shaw reveals through the quiet devastation of "Killing Jar".
An intimate portrait of family resilience in the Venezuelan crisis.
Ryan Farhoudi’s "Road Kill" debuts at HollyShorts 2025, transforming a simple act of goodwill into a harrowing highway thriller that showcases the grit and collaboration of independent filmmaking.
Guy Trevellyan’s debut short "Plastic Surgery" premieres at HollyShorts, using Anna Popplewell’s performance to deliver a visually striking warning about the human impact of plastic pollution.
Ali Cook’s “The Pearl Comb,” a HollyShorts selection, weaves Victorian folklore and feminist themes into the story of a female doctor posing as a witch to defy societal suppression.
Sharon Chetrit’s "Soup", premiering at HollyShorts, transforms postpartum silence into a surreal kitchen nightmare through practical effects and haunting sound design.
Jennifer van Gessel’s "Ver. Fine Day" brings a gothic, risk-taking twist to Anne Lister’s story, premiering at HollyShorts.
Actor-turned-director Kim Blanck debuts "Gloria" at HollyShorts, a tender, film-shot portrait of her mother’s later-life journey that celebrates memory, identity, and the joy of aging.
At HollyShorts, Bear Damen’s Synthesize Me captures a father-daughter bond through the pulse of a synthesizer, embracing night and the raw freedom of indie filmmaking.
Klimovski’s "ATTAGIRL!" premieres at HollyShorts, capturing the raw energy of queer and trans characters who refuse to be confined by stereotypes.
James P. Gannon and Matt Ferrin’s HollyShorts short dives into demolition derby culture with instinctive storytelling and cohesive visual flair.
Alexander Farah’s short film "One Day This Kid", inspired by David Wojnarowicz’s iconic artwork, channels his experiences as a gay Middle Eastern man.
Freddie Fox’s "The Painting & The Statue" premieres at HollyShorts, blending timeless art, love, and whimsical storytelling in a single unforgettable room.
"Olive" immerses audiences in the tender, fractured world of dementia, blending memory, love, and loss at HollyShorts.