The Day

Showing now on HBO Max

Mystic filmmaker’s short is running on the streaming service

- By LEE HOWARD Day Staff Writer

Filmmaker Ross Morin of Mystic, a professor at Connecticu­t College, is perhaps best known for edgy psychologi­cal thrillers, but it was a short 10-minute film about a girl who feels rejected because of cultural difference­s that landed his independen­t production company its biggest honor yet: a spot in the lineup of offerings by Home Box Office.

HBO Films bought the Kiltered Production­s short “¡Comé! (Eat!)” after a sales representa­tive from Premium Films in Paris saw it at a Midwest film festival. Morin served as first assistant director of the bilingual film, produced by the independen­t company that Morin and business partner Matt Herbertz formed several years ago.

Herbertz served as director of photograph­y for the film, and Morin and he secured the services of a Mexican-American director, Lizette Barrera, to bring the story to life. The screenplay was written by Pamela Rodriguez, a young woman of Puerto Rican descent.

“It was the first time Kiltered Production­s had sought out a writer or director,” Morin said in a phone interview. “Kiltered Production­s is committed to giving a voice to underrepre­sented people both in front of and behind the camera.”

The film was shot in 2019 over a two-day period in Lakeland, Fla., before the pandemic. Pre-production planning, Morin said, took about a half year, which included casting, fundraisin­g and identifyin­g major crew members.

The movie featured a wide range of Latinx actors and crew from across the country who brought their own personal experience­s onto the set and to the film.

“It was important for us to have a crew who could tell a story about a young Puerto Rican woman,” Morin said. “It was a beautiful collaborat­ion.”

The autobiogra­phical story revolves around a 12-year-old Puerto Rican girl whose perspectiv­e changes when she brings a popular dessert dish, Arroz con Leche, to a Thanks

giving event at her school and no one eats it. The girl’s teacher comes to her aid, helping her understand that being different isn’t necessaril­y bad; sometimes difference­s can be special.

The film did well as a short at more than 20 festivals around the country that agreed to show it, setting in motion negotiatio­ns that led to Kiltered Production­s and HBO signing a three-year deal to air the film on HBO and HBO Max. The short started streaming in July.

“It’s a really small company,” Morin said of Kiltered Production­s. “We’ve just been doing these projects out of love. It wasn’t in our dreams or imaginatio­n that our film would be on HBO. We’re not doing this for the money. There’s no money in shorts.”

As first assistant director, Morin planned and scheduled every shot, managing the cast and crew and keeping everyone on schedule.

“Working at Connecticu­t College affords me the opportunit­y of working summers on projects,” Morin said. “I start a project every summer and cut (edit) during the winter. I was doing a film a year for a time until COVID. COVID has thrown that off.”

He says having a production company puts him at the nexus of being a business person and an artist.

“You can’t just be one or the other,” he said. “You can’t just have an idea and make a movie. You have to know how to budget time and be meticulous­ly organized.”

 ?? PHOTO BY CALVIN KNIGHT ?? From left, director of photograph­y Matt Herbertz, a Kiltered Production­s co-founder, screenwrit­er Pamela Rodriguez, director Lizette Barrera and first assistant Ross Morin, a Kiltered Production­s co-founder from Mystic, get ready to shoot a scene of the bilingual film “¡Comé! (Eat!)” at North Lakeland Elementary School in Lakeland, Fla., on June 28, 2019. The 10-minute film was picked up for a three-year run starting in July by HBO Films.
PHOTO BY CALVIN KNIGHT From left, director of photograph­y Matt Herbertz, a Kiltered Production­s co-founder, screenwrit­er Pamela Rodriguez, director Lizette Barrera and first assistant Ross Morin, a Kiltered Production­s co-founder from Mystic, get ready to shoot a scene of the bilingual film “¡Comé! (Eat!)” at North Lakeland Elementary School in Lakeland, Fla., on June 28, 2019. The 10-minute film was picked up for a three-year run starting in July by HBO Films.

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