Weekend Calls

Directed by Justin Yoon

Short film

Score featurette/behind the scenes

The Slit-Mouthed Woman

“Winner of Tisch 48-hour project at New York University!” (Spring 2025 semester)

Directed by Izumo Kawabe

A Work of Art

While a frustrated young woman struggles to pack her house to move, she rediscovers a lost piece of herself in an old Walmart uniform.”

Directed by Ben Mattingly

Modern Man

Our submission for the NYU Climate Change Film Festival (We won 3rd place!)”

Directed by Eliot Cho & Jinsung Park

Pulmonary

“Two brothers have to decide who will donate a lung to save their dying father. Neither of them want to.”

Directed by Justin Yoon

Pool Boy

“An ambitious pool boy cleans a filthy pool on a scalding summer day. When thirst strikes he must venture into the house of the unscrupulous owner to quench it.”

Directed by Calvin McCrory

Bug

“Written, shot, & edited in 48 hours for a student run 48 hour film festival at NYU. Won best in show and tied 1st for best genre. Genre of horror + crime was assigned randomly.”

Directed by Justin Yoon

Subpar

“An ambitious golf ball who wants nothing more than to find his home in the hole is paired with a down-on-his-luck golfer who just can’t seem to hit the ball in the right direction.”

Directed by Dennis Morrison

7.45

“The Dream Of A Mortal Man.”

(This score was co-composed with James Sindo, Adam’s part starts at ~4:30)

Directed by Paden Flaster

My Happiest Memories

A Short Film about a man who is stuck in the past... and then runs into it.

Directed by Musa Ashraf

Who Are Jew

“No records? No problem! Just conduct this foolproof series of tests to find out who you are dealing with.”

Directed by Ryan Goldberg

Orientation

“Made in 48 hours with the prompts ‘Period Piece’ and ‘One Location Only’.”

Directed by Ronan McGurn

Greg and the Pediatrician

Directed by Ronan McGurn

The Banker

“After a trivial family argument spirals into something larger on Christmas Eve, a teenage girl is forced to choose between confronting her father or keeping the peace of the family.”

Directed by Andrew Knobbe