18 of the Best Animated Shorts Ever (Video)

18 of the Best Animated Shorts Ever (Video) | Third Monk image 2

Animated Shorts are absolutely amazing. The pure creativity and passion that goes into these works is hard to imagine. And to think, some of these shorts were completed by only one person!

I hope you will love these animated shorts as much as I do. And do tell us which your favorite ones are, or share your favorites if they aren’t in this list. Enjoy!

Oxygen

We follow Oxygen as he tries to make friends on the playground. Unfortunately for Oxygen, he is unaware of the many things that can go wrong when trying to interact with his other elementary kin…

 

Mac ‘n’ Cheese

When you find yourself running scared and running out of energy, there’s only a few options left to outrun your opponent through the southern desert. Stopping at nothing, watch these two guys wear each other out and rip through boundaries hitherto unbroken. Enjoy the ride!

Alma

Seizing the possibility of directing his first independent short film, Rodrigo Blaas asked some of the best artists in their field to take part in this independent project. In October 2010, it was announced that DreamWorks Animation is developing an animated feature film based on Alma. Short’s director Rodrigo Blaas is again set to direct the feature, with Guillermo del Toro executive producing it.

Oktapodi

How adorable are these octopi? In Oktapodi, these two cuties help each other escape the clutches of a tyrannical restaurant cook. But, even once theyre out of the kitchen, their battle to stay together is not over.

The Passenger

A one-man project created between 1998-2006. Find out how and why at http://chrisj.com.au

Get Out

Gary, is a madman, shut up in a padded cell which he refuses to leave. He has a phobia about doors and lives in an imaginary world where he feels secure. A psychiatrist uses different plots to try to get him to leave the cell, but with no success. Finally he has to employ force.

Pigeon: Impossible

A rookie secret agent is faced with a problem seldom covered in basic training: what to do when a curious pigeon gets trapped inside your multi-million dollar, government-issued nuclear briefcase.

Replay

In a destroyed world, the only glimpse of hope is the memory of a forgotten past. But be careful not to let your dreams control your mind…This is Replay an amazing animated short film.

One Life

This animation will make you think about your life.  The song is “old man” by Neil Young. Animation by Corey Hayes.

The Last Knit

When knitting becomes an obsession.

Kiwi!

Kiwi! has received a large following for its deep meaning and heart touching manner.

Skhizein (Jérémy Clapin,2008)

After being struck by a 150-ton meteorite, Henry has to adapt to living precisely 91 centimeters from himself.

MEET MELINE : THE 3D ANIMATED SHORT FILM

Meet Meline tells the story of a little girl whose curiosity is sparked by a mysterious creature as she plays in her grandparents barn.

Dailymotion – Dans la Tête a video from Esma-Movie dans la tete animation english

A story of of fate, love, and death. Highly enjoyable!

A Quoi Ca Sert L’amour? (Perils of Love)

This wonderful short follows the ups and downs of a young couple.

Les Dangereux – A Ninja Love Story

A vacationing ninja finds true love, but it’s much more than he expected.

Thought of You

One of the greatest parts of making this film is reading the comments left on Vimeo and Youtube.  I love the variety of interpretations and meaning – Creator Ryan Woodward

The Man Who Planted Trees

The Man Who Planted Trees (French: L’homme qui plantait des arbres) is a 1987 Canadian shortanimated film directed by Frédéric Back. It is based on the story of the same name by Jean Giono. This is a 30-minute film.

Eye of the Needle: An Ayahuasca Journey, Short Film (Video)

Eye of the Needle: An Ayahuasca Journey, Short Film (Video) | Third Monk

Uncover an ancient South American ritualized medicine and mysterious hallucinogenic substance known as ayahuasca. Director, Daniel LeMunyan leads the viewer through a visually striking exploration into the Peruvian Amazon rainforest and the hidden depths of human consciousness in this short documentary.

Ayahuasca’s active ingredient is DMT or Dimethyltryptamine which causes intense hallucinations lasting for up to 8 hours. Blended and cooked slowly, this brew is a mixture of 2 plants found only in the Amazon and is used by locals to enter a deep trance that is said to heal the body and unlock the subconscious mind. Guided by shamans, a person enters the eye of the needle and must face his own truths and deepest fears.

eye-of-the-needle-ayahuasca

How To Write A Script Outline – Five Key Screenwriting Turning Points

How To Write A Script Outline - Five Key Screenwriting Turning Points | Third Monk image 4

You can create the most interesting character in the world, but without an equally interesting plot, the audience will not want to spend 90-120 minutes with that person.

In a properly structured movie, the story consists of six basic stages, which are defined by five key turning points in the plot. Not only are these turning points always the same; they always occupy the same positions in the story. So what happens at the 25% point of a 90-minute comedy will be identical to what happens at the same percentage of a three-hour epic.

Since one script page equals about one minute on the screen, the 75% mark of a 120-page screenplay will occur at page 90, or about 90 minutes into the two-hour film.

As we explain this six-stage process below, we’ll refer to dozens of successful films, but we also want to take a famous blockbuster Gladiator through this entire structural process.

 

Script Outline – STAGE I: The Setup

script-outline-setup-dawn-of-the-deadThe opening 10% of your screenplay must draw the audience, into the initial setting of the story, must reveal the everyday life your hero has been living, and must establish identification with your hero by making her sympathetic, threatened, likable, funny and/or powerful.

Gladiator: Maximus, Rome’s most powerful, and most popular, general, leads his troops to victory in their final battle.

Similarly, Bowfinger humorously reveals the sad existence of a good hearted but hapless director hustling to get a movie off the ground.

These setups pull us out of our own existence and into the captivating world the screenwriter has created. The first image introduces your story to your audience. Ideally, the first image is a visual representation of your entire story, especially its theme.

TURNING POINT #1: The Opportunity (10%)

Ten percent of the way into your screenplay, your hero must be presented with an opportunity, which will create a new, visible desire, and will start the character on her journey.

Gladiator: Maximus is offered a reward by Emperor Marcus Aurelius, and he says he wants to go home.

This is the point where Neo is taken to meet Morpheus and wants to learn about The Matrix.

Notice that the desire created by the opportunity is not the specific goal that defines your story concept, or the finish line your hero must cross at the end of the film. It is rather a desire to move into the new situation.

 

Script Outline – STAGE 2: The New Situation

script-outline-new-situation-fight-clubFor the next 15% of the story, your hero will react to the new situation that resulted from the opportunity. During this stage, the hero gets acclimated to the new surroundings, tries to figure out what’s going on, or formulates a specific plan for accomplishing his overall goal.

Gladiator: Maximus is asked by the dying Emperor to take control of Rome and give it back to the people, in spite of the ambition of his son Commodus.

In Liar, Liar, Fletcher has to figure out that he’s been cursed to tell the truth.

Very often story structure follows geography, as the opportunity takes your hero to a new location: boarding the cruise ships in Titanic and The Talented Mr. Ripley; going to Cincinnati to bury his father in Rain Man; the President taking off on Air Force One.

In most movies, the hero enters this new situation willingly, often with a feeling of excitement and anticipation, or at least believing that the new problem he faces can be easily solved. But as the conflict starts to build, he begins to realize he’s up against far greater obstacles than he realized, until finally he comes to…

TURNING POINT #2: The Change of Plans (25%)

Something must happen to your hero one-fourth of the way through your screenplay that will transform the original desire into a specific, visible goal with a clearly defined end point.

Gladiator: Maximus, after learning that Commodus has murdered his father, vows to stop the new emperor and carry out Marcus Aurelius’ wishes.

This is the scene where your story concept is defined, and your hero’s outer motivation is revealed.

Outer motivation is a term for the visible finish line the audience is rooting for your hero to achieve by the end of the film. This is what we’re rooting for, and we know that when the hero has accomplished this goal (or failed to), the movie will be over.

This is arguably the most important structural principle you can master. If your hero’s visible goal is defined too early in your script, the story will run out of steam long before the climax. If the outer motivation isn’t defined until the half way point, the reader will have lost interest and moved on to another screenplay.

On rare occasions, the outer motivation is declared at the 10% mark, but the plan for accomplishing the goal won’t be defined, and no action will be taken, until the one-quarter mark. It is at that point that your hero begins to experience…

 

Script Outline – STAGE 3: Progress

script-outline-progress-godfatherFor the next 25% of your story, your hero’s plan seems to be working as he takes action to achieve his goal: Ethan Hunt begins closing in on the villain in Mission: Impossible 2; or Pat gets involved with the woman of his dreams in There’s Something About Mary.

Gladiator: Maximus is taken to be killed, escapes to find his family murdered, and is captured and sold to Proximo, who makes him a powerful gladiator.

This is not to say that this stage is without conflict. This stage changes the entire direction of your story. For example, in a “good vs evil” type story, the good forces have experienced setback after setback. But at the midpoint, something happens that changes their fortunes for the better. For the first time, success seems like a possibility.

In a comedy or drama where people of different personalities are thrown together, the midpoint marks the moment where they stop seeing each other as enemies, usually by accomplishing a minor, but important, goal together.

But whatever obstacles your hero faces, he is able to avoid or overcome them as he approaches…

TURNING POINT #3: The Point of No Return (50%)

At the exact midpoint of your screenplay, your hero must fully commit to her goal. Up to this point, she had the option of turning back, giving up on her plan, and returning to the life she was living at the beginning of the film. But now your hero must burn her bridges behind her and put both feet in.

Gladiator: Maximus arrives in Rome, determined to win the crowd as a Gladiator so he can destroy Commodus.

It is at precisely this moment that Thelma and Louise rob the grocery store or when Truman crosses the bridge in The Truman Show. These heroes are taking a much bigger risk, and exposing themselves to much greater jeopardy, than at any previous time in those films.

As a result of passing this point of no return, your hero must now face…

 

Script Outline – STAGE 4: Complications and Higher Stakes

script-outline-complications-big-lebowskiFor the next 25% of your story, the obstacles become bigger and more frequent, achieving the visible goal becomes far more difficult, and your hero has much more to lose if he fails. After Mitch McDeere begins collecting evidence against The Firm at that movie’s midpoint, he now must hide what he’s doing from both the mob and the FBI (complications), and failure will result in either prison or death (higher stakes).

Gladiator: Maximus faces much greater battles in the arena, becomes a hero to the Roman people, and reveals his true identity to Commodus.

The conflict continues to build until, just as it seems that success is within your hero’s grasp, he suffers…

TURNING POINT #4: The Major Setback (75%)

Around page 90 of your screenplay, something must happen to your hero that makes it seem to the audience that all is lost: Carol dumps Melvin in As Good As It Gets; Morpheus is captured in The Matrix; ” If you’re writing a romantic comedy, this is the point where your hero’s deception is revealed and the lovers break up.

Gladiator: Maximus, declaring he is only a gladiator with no power, refuses to see Gracchus, the leader of the Senate, and Commodus plots to destroy both Maximus and the Senate.

These disastrous events leave your hero with only one option. He can’t return to the life he was living at the beginning of the film, since he eliminated that possibility when he passed the point of no return. And the plan he thought would lead to success is out the window. So his only choice is to make one, last, all-or-nothing, do-or-die effort as he enters…

 

Script Outline – STAGE 5: The Final Push

script-outline-final-push-jackie-brownBeaten and battered, your hero must now risk everything she has, and give every ounce of strength and courage she possesses, to achieve her ultimate goal: Thelma and Louise must outrun the FBI to reach the border; and the Kennedy’s must attempt one final negotiation with the Soviets in 13 Days.

Gladiator: Maximus conspires to escape from Proximo, lead his former troops against Commodus, and give power over Rome to the Senate.

During this stage of your script, the conflict is overwhelming, the pace has accelerated, and everything must work against your hero, until she reaches…

TURNING POINT #5: The Climax (90-99%)

Several things must occur at the climax of the film: the hero must face the biggest obstacle of the entire story; she must determine her own fate; and the outer motivation must be resolved once and for all. This is the big moment where our heroes go into the Twister; the Men In Black go up against the giant alien, and the Jewish factory workers make their escape in Schindler’s List.

Gladiator: Maximus has his final battle with Commodus in the arena.

If he has a tragic flaw, in the climax, he demonstrates that he has overcome it. All the lessons he learned during the second act will pay off in the climax.Notice that the climax can occur anywhere from the 90% point of your screenplay to the last couple minutes of the movie. The exact placement will be determined by the amount of time you need for…

 

Script Outline – STAGE 6: The Aftermath

script-outline-aftermath-waking-lifeNo movie ends precisely with the resolution of the hero’s objective; you must allow the audience to experience the emotion you have elicited in the exciting, sad or romantic climax. You may also need to explain any unanswered questions for the audience, and you want to reveal the new life the hero is living now that he’s completed his journey.

Gladiator: Maximus is united with his family in death, and his body carried away in honor by the new leaders of the Roman republic.

In movies like Rocky, Thelma and Louise and The Truman Show, there is little to explain, and the writer’s goal is to leave the audience stunned or elated. So the climax occurs near the very end of the film. But in most romantic comedies, mysteries and dramas, the aftermath will include the final five or ten pages of the script.

Your closing image is your last contact with your audience, so make it strong. A good closing image, like the spinning top in Inception, can even change our interpretation of the entire ending.

 

script-outline-6-stages-diagram

Understanding these stages and turning points provides you with an effective template for developing and writing your screenplay. Is your story concept defined at the one-quarter mark? Is your hero’s goal truly visible, with a clearly implied outcome, and not just an inner desire for success, acceptance or self worth? Have you fully introduced your hero before presenting her with an opportunity around page 10? Does she suffer a major setback 75% of the way into your script?

But a word of caution: don’t let all these percentages block your creativity. Structure is an effective tool for rewriting and strengthening the emotional impact of your story. But you don’t want to be imprisoned by it. Come up with characters you love and a story that ignites your passion. Then apply these structural principles, to ensure that your screenplay will powerfully touch the widest possible audience.

The Five Key Turning Points Of All Successful Movie Scripts | Movie Outline

Twenty Basic Plots of Screenwriting

Twenty Basic Plots of Screenwriting | Third Monk image 2

After you come up with your own system for generating ideas, the next step is to put them in some recognizable story form (the basic plot idea), build your central conflict (the story premise sheet), then build your character and underlying themes (the thematic premise sheet).

#1 QUEST

The plot involves the Protagonist’s search for a person, place or thing, tangible or intangible (but must be quantifiable, so think of this as a noun; i.e., immortality). In Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, the stoner best friends go on a journey to find the ultimate late night munchies.

#2 ADVENTURE

This plot involves the Protagonist going in search of their fortune, and since fortune is never found at home, the Protagonist goes to search for it in unfamiliar territory.

#3 PURSUIT

This plot literally involves hide-and-seek, one person chasing another.

#4 RESCUE

This plot involves the Protagonist searching for someone or something, usually consisting of three main characters – the Protagonist, the Victim & the Antagonist.

#5 SACRIFICE

Plot involves the Protagonist taking action(s) that is motivated by a higher purpose (concept) such as love, honor, charity or for the sake of humanity.

 

#6 REVENGE

Retaliation by Protagonist or Antagonist against the other for real or imagined injury. In Oldboy, revenge knows no limits.

#7 THE RIDDLE

Plot involves the Protagonist’s search for clues to find the hidden meaning of something in question that is deliberately enigmatic or ambiguous.

#8 RIVALRY

Plot involves Protagonist competing for same object or goal as another person (their rival).

#9 UNDERDOG

Plot involves a Protagonist competing for an object or goal that is at a great disadvantage and is faced with overwhelming odds.

#10 TEMPTATION

Plot involves a Protagonist that for one reason or another is induced or persuaded to do something that is unwise, wrong or immoral.

 

#11 MATURATION

Plot involves the Protagonist facing a problem that is part of growing up, and from dealing with it, emerging into a state of adulthood (going from innocence to experience). In The Lion King, young Simba matures into a king after dealing with an uncle that hates on his throne.

#12 TRANSFORMATION

Plot involves the process of change in the Protagonist as they journey through a stage of life that moves them from one significant character state to another.

#13 METAMORPHOSIS

This plot involves the physical characteristics of the Protagonist actually changing from one form to another (reflecting their inner psychological identity).

#14 LOVE

Plot involves the Protagonist overcoming the obstacles to love that keeps them from consummating (engaging in) true love.

#15 FORBIDDEN LOVE

Plot involves Protagonist(s) overcoming obstacles created by social mores and taboos to consummate their relationship (and sometimes finding it at too high a price to live with).

 

#16 ESCAPE

Plot involves a Protagonist confined against their will who wants to escape (does not include someone trying to escape their personal demons). In The Shawshank Redemption, Andy Dufresne goes through a tunnel of shit to get his life back.

#17 DISCOVERY

Plot that is the most character-centered of all, involves the Protagonist having to overcome an upheavel(s) in their life, and thereby discovering something important (and buried) within them a better understanding of life (i.e., better appreciation of their life, a clearer purpose in their life, etc.)

#18 WRETCHED EXCESS

Plot involves a Protagonist who, either by choice or by accident, pushes the limits of acceptable behavior to the extreme and is forced to deal with the consequences (generally deals with the psychological decline of the character).

#19 ASCENSION

Rags-to-riches plot deals with the rise (success) of Protagonist due to a dominating character trait that helps them to succeed.

#20 DECISION

Riches-to-rags plot deals with the fall (destruction) of Protagonist due to dominating character trait that eventually destroys their success.

(Note: Sometimes #19 & #20 are combined into rags-to-riches-to-rags (or vice versa) of a Protagonist who does (or doesn’t) learn to deal with their dominating character trait.)

IDEAS, PLOTS & USING THE PREMISE SHEETS | Tennessee Screenwriting Association

Top 8 Offbeat Documentaries

Top 8 Offbeat Documentaries | Third Monk image 7

Hilarious rednecks, grizzly bears, the homeless, and a LSD inspired comic book artist are just some of the focus subjects in our list of the top offbeat documentaries.

8. Overnight (2003)

Overnight traces the meteoric rise and fall of aspiring filmmaker Troy Duffy, a former bartender who turns out to be one of the most misguided and obnoxious human beings on the planet. After fucking up a movie deal and alienating just about all his friends and family, Duffy somehow managed to go on to direct an awesome cult flick called The Boondock Saints. The last shot of Duffy talking to himself as he wanders aimlessly outside a bar is truly disturbing.

Sample Dialogue: “As for my film career? Get used to it, cause it ain’t goin’ anywhere. Period.”

Overnight Trailer

 

7. Monster Road (2004)

“I go for the lowest common denominator. Just get some stuff in front of the camera and get some action out of it. Get the most I can out of those figures before they wear out . . .” Monster Road explores the fascinating life and work of underground clay animation artist, Bruce Bickford, who collaborated with the late, great Frank Zappa on a number of projects such as the 1979 movie, Baby Snakes. This ain’t Gumby and Pokey, folks. Some of Bickford’s clay animation works are truly disturbing! Monster Road also introduces us to Bickford’s equally eccentric father, George, a retired aerospace engineer who is suffering from the onset of Alzheimer’s Disease.

Sample Dialogue: “Isn’t it remarkable? This little planet we’re on . . . Is this the headquarters for something?”

Monster Road Trailer

 

6. Grizzly Man (2005)

“I will die for these animals, I will die for these animals, I will die for these animals . . .” Legendary filmmaker Werner Herzog returns to his favorite theme, obsession, as he traces the story of Timothy Treadwell, an amateur naturalist who spent 13 summers among wild brown bears at Katmai National Park in Alaska. Treadwell and his girlfriend were tragically killed by one of the bears during the fall of 2003. This is an extraordinary, funny, and haunting documentary full of astounding footage and some great introspective narration.

Sample Dialogue: “And what haunts me, is that in all the faces of all the bears that Treadwell ever filmed, I discover no kinship, no understanding, no mercy. I see only the overwhelming indifference of nature. To me, there is no such thing as a secret world of the bears. And this blank stare speaks only of a half-bored interest in food. But for Timothy Treadwell, this bear was a friend, a savior.”

The Grizzly Man Trailer

 

5. Burden of Dreams (1982)

Les Blank’s riveting documentary focuses on the utter chaos surrounding the filming of Werner Herzog’s epic, Fitzcarraldo in the jungles of South America. Whether having to replace his entire cast, attempting to drag a 320-ton steamer over a small mountain or trying to deal with totally insane actor Klaus Kinski, Herzog reveals an unwavering obsession to finish his film.

Sample Dialogue:“Without dreams we would be cows in a field and I don’t want to live like that. I live my life or I end my life with this project.”

Burden of Dreams Trailer

 

4. American Movie (1999)

American Movie documents the life of Mark Borchardt, an obsessed filmmaker who lives about as far away from Hollywood as you could possibly get – Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. Borchardt’s main goal in life is to finish a full-length horror film titled Northwestern. It’s obvious that this guy’s entire film career is based on the opening scenes of Night of the Living Dead. Mark’s determined to live out his version of the American dream. He’s also a deadbeat dad with three kids out of wedlock.

To fund his masterpiece, Mark runs up credit cards, borrows from friends and relatives, and works a series of menial jobs – from delivering newspapers to vacuuming a mausoleum. His creditors are after him and so is the IRS. He doesn’t give a shit. So he drops Northwestern and focuses on a shorter film called Coven, “a psychological thriller portraying an alcoholic writer’s descent into the demonic abyss of a self-support group.” He figures if he can sell 3,000 “units” of the flick at $14.95 apiece he can raise enough money to finish his dream project. The final scene of American Movie is very revealing. It shows some of Mark’s old silent black-and-white film clips from the early ’80s – the same friends racing around madly, drinking beer and raising hell. Nothing has really changed

Sample Dialogue: “Is that what you wanna do with your life? Suck down peppermint schnapps and try to call Morocco at two in the morning? That’s senseless! But that’s what happens, man.”

American Movie Trailer

 

3. Crumb (1994)

As Crumb opens, Robert Crumb, complete with his trademark cheap suit, thick glasses and porkpie hat, sits cross-legged on the floor, listening pensively to a scratchy blues record from his extensive and rare 78-rpm album collection. We soon learn that “bizarre” and “dysfunctional” don’t even come close to describing Crumb’s family. A bleak childhood led Crumb and his two brothers to escape into a fantasy world of comic books. Crumb admits that he was attracted to Bug Bunny as a child and later became fixated on Sheena, Queen of the Jungle. His first sexual memory is of hanging out in his mother’s closet and humping a pair of her cowboy boots, while singing “Jesus loves me, yes I know . . .”

Needless to say, he didn’t get a single date during high school. It was during the late ’60s that Crumb created his most popular work such as Keep on Truckin’ (which caused him “nothing but headaches”), Mr. Natural and Fritz the Cat, which was made into a cartoon that “embarrassed me for the rest of my life,” he reveals. He finally got revenge on Fritz in a later comic by having a female ostrich stab him in the head with an icepick. Crumb’s LSD-inspired comics during the ’60s truly captured the seamy side of America’s subconscious.

Sample Dialogue: “My father was a rigid, gung-ho type who had a hard-ass attitude to life . . . All three of his sons ended up to be wimpy, nerdy weirdos. He wanted at least one of us to end up as a Marine. He always wore a fixed smile, which I later learned was a sign of deep depression.”

Crumb Trailer

 

2. The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia (2009)

From Johnny Knoxville and Dickhouse Productions, The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia is basically a real Trailer Park Boys documentary. It’s genuinely hilarious if you take a step back and observe its truly absurd characters. For example, it features someone who has huffed so much gas he can tell, by scent, the difference in the grades now. Apparently he’s been told by doctors he has a hole in his brain and “I’ve got a brain cell that don’t work, I don’t know which one but that’s what they tell me.”

It’s like watching a car wreck. The people in this family are wild human beings. Lots of sadness, violence and drug abuse revolve around this family, and they mask a lot of their sadness by rolling with the flow, and living up to their legendary name. It’s an interesting look at a type of people most in this country don’t get to experience firsthand.

Sample Dialogue: “You know what my daddy used to say? He used to say, ‘When you get too old to cut the mustard, lick the jar.’ I don’t know what he meant by that.”

The Wild and Wonderful Whites of West Virginia Trailer

 

1. Dark Days (2000)


Near Penn Station, next to the Amtrak tracks, the homeless have been living for years. Marc Singer goes underground to live with them, and films this “family.” A dozen or so men and one woman talk about their lives: horrors of childhood, jail time, losing children, being coke-heads. They scavenge, they’ve built themselves sturdy one-room shacks; they have pets, cook, chat, argue, give each other haircuts. A bucket is their toilet. Leaky overhead pipes are a source of water for showers. They live in virtual darkness. During the filming, Amtrak gives a 30-day eviction notice.

The “characters” in the film all told their individual stories but none of them tried to make any excuses for things they’ve done in the past to get them where they were which is what ultimately makes you sympathize with them. The documentary is beautifully shot on black and white film which was impressive considering the lighting issues inside the tunnel. DJ Shadow, a trip hop DJ provided the score which really added to the mood of the narrative.

Sample Dialogue: “What they should do is leave us down here, that’s what they should do. Leave us down here until they get housing and when they get housing they ship us out. But not just take us out of here. I mean we’re all down here by ourselves, my friend. Like a family alright, you gonna break up the whole family. It’s not worth it, it’s not fair to us”

Dark Days Trailer