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The Last Bateau

In the quiet woods of East Texas, producer Brittani Mathis uncovers a wooden bateau built by her great-grandfather, Wyatt Moore, and a box of cassette tapes where his voice still lingers. Nearly fifty years after he recorded them, she returns to Caddo Lake to restore the last bateau he built. In doing so, she reconnects with the craft, memory, and lineage that shaped then both. Anchored around archival audio and quiet observation, this lyrical documentary moves like memory.

The Last Bateau

NR 2026
Rewired: Identity in the Age of Mass Distraction

In an age where everyone is connected, our identities start to become shaped by a second life online. Our story follows the patterns of thinking and shared experiences brought upon by a digital world. Many generations are following unwritten rules and guidelines on how to act online, which affect their interactions. Childhood is not the same as it once was, due to an all-consuming digital landscape. The lack of accountability and empathy that exists with the world's future generations has led to an uptick in mental health crises and people feeling more isolated than ever. If we are so connected, then why is there silence?

Rewired: Identity in the Age of Mass Distraction

10.0 2026
A Traveller Family

A Traveller Family' explores the lives of four generations of the Collins family, from Big James Collins, one of the last Traveller tinsmiths in Ireland, to his great-grandniece and great-grandnephew, Catherine and Dan, aged 14 and 16, from actor and activist, Michael and Catherine Collins to Johnny Collins, 20, the first in his extended family to enter third-level education. Through one family's story, the film reflects on changing times, Traveller identity, and the powerful role creativity plays across generations.

A Traveller Family

NR 2026
The Boy Who Collects Spider-Man

What if Spider-Man’s most important mission wasn’t saving the city? In The Boy Who Collects Spider-Man, Spider-Man meets his biggest fan, Tim—a kid who’s collected everything about him, from his first appearance to every battle he’s ever fought. What starts as a dream come true quickly becomes something deeper as Tim begins asking real questions about power, responsibility, and what it means to be a hero, forcing Peter to open up in ways he never has before. But as the night goes on, Spider-Man realizes this isn’t just a visit—it’s a moment that matters more than anything he’s done in the suit, proving that being a hero isn’t about fighting villains or saving the world, but about showing up for someone when they need it most.

The Boy Who Collects Spider-Man

NR 2026
RUN BABY RUN

RUN BABY RUN was inspired by a news headline, Sorry, AI won’t “fix” climate change (MIT Technology Review). According to The World Economic Forum, AI tools predict weather, track icebergs, recycle waste and find plastic in the ocean, however, on its own, AI is powerless to solve climate change––regulation is required for that. An encouraging arena where AI has made quiet progress, is education. Climate change video games can teach children about climate change in subtle ways––no lectures or preaching required. However, the most popular games, ones played mostly by adults, focus on building new cities that have a low carbon footprint, or take place on another planet after earth is no longer habitable. I can only surmise that it’s not entertaining to try and fix the problems we currently face. Has the race already been won?

RUN BABY RUN

NR 2026