FIL-AM is playing at SBIFF (Santa Barbara International Film Festival), and I had the opportunity to see an early look ā hereās my spoiler-free take:
Short-films are hard. Filmmakers usually have the odds stacked against them. From low-budgets, inexperienced actors, and trying to capture the audienceās attention and have them feel some sort of empathy in a limited amount of time is a daunting task. Thatās why when a short like FIL-AM effortlessly moves you as an audience in under fifteen minutes, it quickly becomes a film you donāt want to ādipā out on.
Thatās all, thanks to writer/director Ralph Torrefranca. Heās able to get the most from A MAN ON THE INSIDEās Deuce Basco, who turns in a soulful performance as Jonah, the down-on-his-luck teen whoās having to decide on whether he can āoffer his mom grace.ā
This proof-of-concept might center on a Filipino family, yet the themes of teenage angst and resistance to change are universal. Jonahās journey is intertwined with his Filipino-American identity, adding a unique layer to the filmās narrative. In Jonah, I saw some of the same struggles my family is going through with a teenager who pushes back on everything we say. Those years arenāt easy, and itās encouraging to see how Torrenfranca uses those themes in his short film while also exploring what it means to be āAmerican.ā
Final Thought: Before FIL-AM, I didnāt know who Ralph Torrefranca was. After the film, I canāt wait to see what he makes next.
FIL-AM premieres at SBIFF on Sat 2/7 ā 8:40 PM

