Pol Diggler


Bio Unavailable
 

Paige Dillon

Country: United States of America

Paige is a writer and director born in Monroe, New York, currently living in Brooklyn with her pet rat Neptune. She is passionate about film and theater, but above all else, keeping things campy. Her goal in every work is to make people laugh and show them something they've never seen before.
Since graduating from NYU's Tisch Film program, she has worked as a testing coordinator for HBO, and presently as an Art Assistant at Showtime. When she is not working, she is embroidering memes, hosting elaborate murder mysteries, or marveling at the sky with her besties.

 

Alex DiVincenzo


Bio Unavailable
 

Jonathan Doe

Country: United States of America

Bio Unavailable
  IMDb
 

Cole Doran

Country: Canada

Born in Orillia, Ontario, and now based in Toronto, Canada, Cole is a seasoned filmmaker with a professional career in film and television as a VFX set supervisor & data wrangler who loves to eliminate vfx shots and do shit practical. His filmmaking journey began as soon as he gained consciousness, at the dawn of the internet, creating short films and skits for YouTube in early 2007—an experience that ignited his passion for the craft. While large-scale productions demand much of his time and energy, Cole seizes every opportunity to pursue his own projects as a writer and director.

  Website
 

Sebastian Doringer


Bio Unavailable
 

Caroline Dujardin

Country: Belgium

Bio Unavailable
 

Geneviève Dunn


Bio Unavailable
 

Mickaël Dusa


Bio Unavailable
 

Andrew Edisson

Country: United States of America

ANDREW EDISON is a Brooklyn-based indie filmmaker and the creative mind behind Kevin Smith's BINDLESTIFFS, winner of the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature at the Slamdance Film Festival. BINDLESTIFFS is distributed under Smith's Smodcast Pictures label across major streaming platforms including Netflix, Hulu, Prime Video, iTunes, and Redbox. Edison's recent short films are currently screening at festivals internationally. The Huffington Post praised his work as having "the kind of devotion to craft that is missing from most indie cinema and far too many Hollywood pictures."