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Classroom creativity gets big-screen results for Cinema and Media Arts students

Film movie camera
Nashville Film Festival 2025 stage (Submitted photo)

When the lights went down in the packed theater at the acclaimed Nashville Film Festival, the dreams cultivated in film classes became a big-screen reality for Vanderbilt students.

For the first time, three Vanderbilt student films were accepted as official selections for the Academy Award鈥搎ualifying film festival.

Poster for the Monumental documentary

was directed by Caitlin Nitschke (Class of 2026) and John Mansueto (Class of 2028) and produced by Kylie Sullivan, BA鈥25. The cinematographers were Ifedolapo Ayewale and Stephanie Yu, and editors were Alexander Mayo and Matthew Oh, all in the Class of 2026. The film was made in the spring 2025 documentary production class led by , senior lecturer in cinema and media arts.

鈥淚t was super cool to see people鈥檚 reactions, but I couldn鈥檛 help thinking about all of the edits and things that we could have fixed or changed, all the decisions we made with so much detail over the course of a semester,鈥 said Mansueto, a chemistry and cinema and media arts double major.

Sculptor Alan LeQuire works in his studio. (Submitted photo)

Monumental takes viewers into the life and studio of renowned Nashville sculptor , BA鈥78, as he prepared for an exhibition inside the Nashville Parthenon. LeQuire is the sculptor of the Athena statue that stands 42 feet tall in the Parthenon鈥檚 east room, as well as many other works across the city and the Vanderbilt campus. The usually private artist and his wife joined the students at the event.

The documentary won at the festival.

鈥淢y stomach dropped it was so exciting,鈥 exclaimed Nitschke, who is double majoring in cinema and media arts and art.

鈥淚t’s such a joy to be able to share someone鈥檚 story, honoring them and their experience.鈥 鈥擟aitlin Nitschke

Haebangchon movie poster

, written, directed, produced and edited by , BA鈥25, with cinematographer Eddy Kwon, BA鈥23, was made in an independent study with , associate professor of cinema and media arts, in spring 2025.

Sanghee Han, BA鈥25, while helping on a film shoot (Submitted photo)

鈥淭his was my first time having a film selected by a festival, so it was huge for me. I know it’s unhealthy to only seek external validation, but I’ve been wanting that official laurel from a great festival鈥攁nd Nashville is definitely one,鈥 said Han, who graduated with a double major in history of art and cinema and media arts.

She is currently working as an associate producer at a production company in South Korea, while also working on her own films.

 

Poster for Amor del Cielo

, written, directed, produced and edited by Yuanfeng Watermelon Song, BA鈥25, was made in the 16mm filmmaking course with Jonathan Rattner in spring 2025.

Amor del Cielo by Watermelon Song is a gorgeous film shot on celluloid, and Watermelon is brilliant,鈥 Rattner said.

ALUMNI LAUDED

Films of alumni of the cinema and media arts department also were lauded at the Nashville Film Festival.

Sebasti谩n Lasaosa Rogers, BA’13 (Submitted photo)

The late Sebasti谩n Lasaosa Rogers, BA鈥13, was the cinematographer for which won the Best Hispanic Feature Film Award. by Ford Cowan, BS鈥24, and Rahul Koul, BS鈥24, won Best Tennessee Short.

鈥淚t is unusual to have so many of our students and former students get into the same festival across various categories, so it鈥檚 a proud year for us,鈥 鈥擩onathan Rattner

POINT OF VU FILM FESTIVAL

Point of VU Student Film Festival

Along with learning the art, history and craft of film itself, the CMA department gives students hands-on experience in a mainstay of the movie world, film festivals.

鈥淚 ran film festivals before coming to Vanderbilt, and there are lots of students who can go on to have successful careers in the film festival world,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥淎long with interacting with filmmakers and other creatives, they learn incredibly valuable skills on the business side of festival management and planning.鈥

Point of VU Student Film Festival

Students are leading Vanderbilt鈥檚 second annual on Feb. 14, 2026, at Sarratt Student Center.

The festival will showcase short films created by university students across Middle Tennessee, as well as panel discussions, guest speakers and networking opportunities.

鈥淚t provides a competitive environment for emerging filmmakers to present their work, enhancing the quality of student films at each university and fostering connections,鈥 said Kramer, who is the Point of VU festival faculty adviser.

SMALL SCREEN SUCCESS

Thanks to the opportunities provided at the first Point of VU Student Film Festival, CMA students also saw success on the small screen. One of last year鈥檚 judges was so impressed with some of the entries that she created slots for the short films to run on PBS stations and on PBS World channel.

Poster for Free Play

One of the Vanderbilt entries that aired was the documentary by Alex Astrella, MEd鈥23, which follows a mother who helped create the largest all-inclusive playground in Middle Tennessee.

Today, Astrella, who was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder as a child, is a board-certified assistant behavior analyst and the founder and CEO of , an award-winning film studio that employs artists across the disability spectrum.

Poster for Edgehill

The second documentary that aired was , by Anna Friedland, BS鈥25, a double major in human and organizational development and cinema and media arts. The film follows an aspiring group of musicians hoping to hit it big in Nashville.

CREATIVE EXPERIMENTATION

The nature of Vanderbilt students is to have vast interests and passions across disciplines. The CMA professors are motivated with systems in place to foster that creativity.

鈥淎 lot of our production classes follow a model of giving students ownership over their work without some formula to follow,鈥 Kramer said.

鈥淲e want you to experiment. We want you to fail. We want to celebrate that and then have that compassionate mentorship that students need to help them through some of that vulnerable and creative work that they’re doing.鈥 鈥擬ariah Kramer

WATCH Social Dore and Monumental cinematographer Stephanie Yu as she takes us along to the Nashville Film Festival