3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most powerful and inspiring Gun Violence films at We Are Moving Stories. These include short and feature length drama and documentary about young people, responses both fictional and real to gun violence, serial killers, sociopaths and terrorism in the US and globally.

Total length of this section: 20 films.

<YOUNG PEOPLE>

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We Are Columbine - Nearly 20 years after one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history, four survivors return to Columbine High School to share their experiences and journeys toward healing. Length: 1 hour 18 minutes. Director Laura Farber:

I was determined to make this film about the collective experience of the people who were at Columbine on 4/20/99 and not about the crime. I wanted it to be solely about the kids that went through it and we have been healing on our own, but also about how we have come together to help each other.

This film is for anyone who has experienced trauma and can’t believe how we can move through and beyond it.
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No More Thoughts and Prayers - In a nation that is getting ripped apart by gun violence the students organize the March for Our lives and demand action. All of us can make a difference with our votes in the next and future elections. The Kids are counting on YOU. Length: 19.13 minutes. Writer, Director, Producer Angela Lamb:

An audience member should watch the film to learn more about Moms Demand Action and how to become a gunsense voter in the next and ongoing elections. The film is not anti-gun. It is anti-gun violence. Gun violence in the US is a national non-partisan public health epidemic. We must all become aware of how to get involved to protect our kids and future generations.

<FICTION>

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Lola: Girl Got a Gun - A young girl captures her father’s loaded pistol, paints it bubble gum pink, names it Lola and keeps it as her own. Length: 14.45 minutes. Writer/Director Emily Elizabeth Thomas:

Lola: Girl Got a Gun bares witness to a young and angelic girl who experiences the emotional weight of her mother’s abuse by her conservative NRA member father. The heaviness of the abuse permeates her home, and she searches for an outlet for her anger and fear. She feels that all is lost, until one day she wanders into her parents’ room the morning after a particularly violent night. What she finds changes her worldview permanently: her father’s loaded pistol. She decides to keep it as her own, names it Lola, and paints it bubble gum pink. The girl’s got a gun now – her very own defense – and nobody can take it away from her.

Turner Risk - An unemployed young man trying to get his life in order teams up with his high school nemesis and a new friend to stop his long-bullied roommate from committing a deadly rampage. 1 hour 52 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Michael Dailey:

“The overall experience I’m most trying to communicate through Turner Risk is that life is an adventure that can never be calculated. Instead, it is impulsive as hell – and how we confront the many challenges it brings fuels our endurance and affirms our independence. With that in mind, co-writer Morgan Lintz and I built our screenplay on the belief that each of the character’s triumphs and failures is universal. Authenticity was key, so we relied on personal experiences and meticulously crafted our characters as hybrids of real, relatable someones we know. ”

<RESPONSES>

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Goodbye Charm City - A mother must decide whether she wants to encourage capital punishment upon the man who murdered her son. Length: 18 Minutes. Writer/Director Christian Grier:

My film was inspired by my mother who runs a beareavement center in Baltimore, MD. Thanks to her, she introduced me to 4 mothers who each lost their sons from gun violence in the city. They all had different perspectives about what went down, their process in grief, and seeking the why in the matter.

Gunwalkers - A chronicle of the carnage resulting from the release of guns to criminals as part of a government sting. Length: 19 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Addison Sandoval:

The America that existed in 2009, which is when them takes place, was very dystopian; only a year removed from the greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression. This laid the groundwork for the perfect modern Film Noir journey. Blueprinted front and center into the narrative is an Arizona family’s vicissitudes of fortune. Led by a father whose love is so fierce, he ultimately becomes blinded by it in the wake of the carnage unleashed by walking guns
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In God I Trust - Redemption, violence and faith define a young black man, a reckless white nationalist and a pair of traveling vacationers during a random encounter within Northern Idaho, in this suspenseful thriller by Maja Zdanowski. Length: 98 minutes. Co-writer/Director/Producer/Editor Maja Zdanowski:

Whether you are a believer or not is something we all deal with or experience on some level. The choices our characters make in our story can be directly effected by their personal beliefs. Racism is at the forefront world wide. In God I Trust delves deep into the relationship between racism and how it relates to gun violence in America.

The Right Thing - In the dead of night, a young African-American woman enters a convenience store with a loaded gun, seeking the right thing in a world with no black and white. Length: 10.57 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Andrew C. Fisher:

I wanted to deal honestly with the subject of violent vengeance. Television and movies usually present this kind of event simply and without nuance. I hope to make people think about how complicated an act like this is for the person taking vengeance.

Her Place - A 1950s housewife awakens to a future far removed from mid-century nostalgia. Length: 5.12 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer/Actor/Editor Kathryn Parks:

While we have progressed in many ways, ... School shootings have become all too commonplace. I wanted to pivot the conversation (which is typically presented from the male’s point of view within the media) to the female perspective. I also felt it necessary to draw attention to the experience of first responders in our modern-day world. Rarely is the trauma to first-responders even mentioned in gun control debates as a reason to push legislation.

<REAL-LIFE RESPONSES>

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Five Awake - Five women who are outraged over Louisiana's high rate of domestic violence homicide set out to change laws to grant women better protections. Length: 36 minutes. Director/Producer Donna Dees:

Women who take on tough causes tend to succeed when men fail because women, in my opinion, are far better at compromise. They also know how to delegate. And, most importantly, they know how to share credit. Hence the title “Five Awake.” Not “One Awake.” Even Susan Willis and I in making the film had some differences of opinion. And we worked through them. That’s what women do.

Art for Peace - After South Sudan's independence in 2011, the world's youngest country plunged into conflict again in 2013. This film by the Thomson Reuters Foundation tells the story of South Sudan's young artists battling for peace with music, film and poetry. Length: 15 minutes. Director Shanshan Chen:

People don’t know much about South Sudan and it’s a great opportunity to start to understand the people and the situation in the country. The wider world usually only associates South Sudan with war and violence, so I’d like to find a different narrative and the wider audience can see a different side of South Sudan where the young generation using creativity to tackle the country’s considerable problems.

Can Art Stop a Bullet: William Kelly's Big Picture - Can art stop a bullet? Length: 1 hour 33 minutes. Director Mark Street:

The film is predominantly the voice of the artist William Kelly and we examine his personal life against a background of war, poverty and racial conflict. Kelly takes us on an intriguing journey through the history of violence and a study of the human condition through his artwork the”Big Picture”.
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Too Many Bodies - is a dance and music video addressing America’s need for gun reform through dance, music and passion, culminating in a website of resources for advocacy and survivor support. Length: 5.59 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Reena Dutt:

What happens to the families who have lost loved ones? What happens to the community members who were witnesses? What happens to the survivor with life-changing PTSD? What happens to the onlooker who doesn’t know how to help?

Film and movement were always my go-to therapy, and TOO MANY BODIES brings the two together as a means to express something that is as important to my soul as is being an American. The music video is partnered with a website for survivors, advocates, and loved ones.

Haunted Witness - Well-known Vancouver journalist Jeremy Hainsworth reveals how years of police and crime reporting left him suffering in silence while management showed a shocking lack of support for his mental health and wellbeing. Length: 10.12 minutes. Director/Producer/Editor Daniel Clarke:

Anyone who has suffered mental illness or experienced PTSD – either themselves or friends or family - will gain strength from this film. Many viewers will have personal experience with depression and drug and alcohol problems caused by workplace stress. This film has universal themes that delve into the rights of employees to feel safe and fully equipped with the skills to deal with the trauma they witness or are directly affected by. Emergency service employees, humanitarian workers and those within the media industry will find Jeremy’s story particularly poignant.

<SERIAL KILLERS>

No One Is Safe From Son of Sam - Experience the fear and paranoia of New York City during the Summer of 1977. This short documentary explores the legacy of the Son of Sam case using original footage not seen since it aired and interviews with PIX11 journalists. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Heath Benfield:

Most people recognize Son of Sam as an infamous serial killer case, but after 40 years many have forgotten the visceral impact it had on the citizens of New York at the time. This film was designed to capture that feeling of paranoia, fear and hysteria during the summer of ’77. We want modern audiences to experience a sense of what New Yorkers went through.

The Fawn Response -Two serial killers meet over coffee when they realize they've targeted the same victim by mistake. Length: 18 minutes. Writer/Director Wynter Rhys:

I think seeing two vastly juxtaposed serial killers speak about their creative differences when it comes to murdering the same woman is not an experience you could achieve outside of watching The Fawn Response. Through my film, audiences get a firsthand look at the human psyche when things go wrong, and get a chance to view love, attraction, and affection in a whole new and twisted perspective.

<SOCIOPATHS>

Hank Boyd is Dead is pitch black comedy of terrors that that follows, in real time, a hapless caterer held hostage by a bickering family of sociopaths who will stop at nothing to protect their secrets. Length: 73 minutes. Writer/Director Sean Melia:

I fell in love the idea of a bickering clan of sociopaths with the same dysfunctions as a typical American family and how that could play against the horror of what was happening, sort of an Arrested Development meets the Sawyers from Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

<TERRORISM>

The Sun Is Rising (le soleil se leve) - Is there a key to talking about terrorism and armed conflict? A man looks at terrorism attacks at Canada's National War Memorial and Charlie Hebdo. Length: 8 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Lloyd Frost:

I live in Ottawa. When Cpl Nathan Cirillo was murdered at our National War Memorial I was shocked. I got my camera and went to the Memorial on Elgin Street. Didn’t even think why, I just felt the need to document what had happened a short drive from where I live. That’s pretty personal, don’t you think?

Excess Will Save Us - In a small village of the North of France, an attack alert has been set off due to the combination of two events: the beginning of the hunting season and an argument between drunk Polish workers. Length: 14.26 minutes. Writer/Director Morgane Dziurla-Petit:

“In Villereau, a village of five square kilometers in the north of France, a terrorist alert was set off as a result of the villagers’ hysteria. After investigating the matter, the police and army discovered that what they thought was a terrorist attack was actually the result of two overlapping events, the beginning of the hunting season and an argument between two drunken Polish workers. The villagers thought they recognized the words ‘Allah Akbar’ in the foreign language that they could not understand.” I laughed a lot at the story, but it also made me stop and think, which led me to want to make Excess Will Save Us

The Same Story - Madeline, a young journalist covering the trial of an old friend, can't stop thinking of all the events that brought them there. Length: 18 minutes. Writer/Director/Editor Alice Airoldi:

When Renato Curcio, founder and head of the Italian terrorist group Red Brigades, was asked whether he regretted the multiple murders and kidnappings that he committed in the name of their organization, he replied that he didn’t. Something had to be done to disrupt the status quo, and although their revolution ultimately failed, he doesn’t regret doing everything he could have done to, in his eyes, help the cause.