Search form

Sony Future Filmmaker Awards Announces 2025 Edition Shortlist

30 filmmakers across 4 categories including animation get the opportunity to attend a 4-day program at Sony Pictures Studios from June 2-5, culminating in a June 5 ceremony when 4 winners will be revealed.

The Sony Future Filmmaker Awards has just announced the shortlist for its upcoming 2025 edition shortlist. The 30 filmmakers across four categories (Fiction, Non-Fiction, Animation, and Student) now get the opportunity to attend a four-day immersive program at Sony Pictures Studios from June 2-5, culminating in the Awards ceremony on June 5, where four winners will be revealed.

Now in its third year, the Awards were established by Creo in partnership with Sony to provide a portal into the industry for filmmakers from across the globe. Each year, the shortlisted filmmakers are flown to Los Angeles for an extensive program of workshops, screenings, and events, expanding networks and providing direct experiences.

The 2025 shortlist was chosen from over 11,750 films submitted by more than 7,500 filmmakers across 158 countries and territories. The selected works span an array of stories, from a tense drama about an inmate firefighter battling parole denial amidst a historic blaze, to an animated fable of a piglet and a wolf forging an unlikely friendship.

The judge’s panel includes filmmaker/writer Minhal Baig (We Grown Now, Hala, BoJack Horseman); president of 3000 Pictures Elizabeth Gabler (Where the Crawdads Sing, upcoming Klara and the Sun, Life of Pi); filmmaker Jason Reitman (Saturday Night, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Juno); and director/Chair of the Jury Justin Chadwick (Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom, The Other Boleyn Girl, Shardlake).

“These 30 filmmakers don’t only tell stories — they create whole new cinematic worlds,” said Chadwick. “From tales of defiance in the face of adversity, to stories of hope for our planet, the films that make up this year’s shortlist have the power to transport their audiences. Chairing this jury for the third year, I am once again deeply impressed and encouraged as we look to the future of filmmaking through the eyes of these brilliant talents.”

The films and filmmakers shortlisted for the Sony Future Filmmaker Awards 2025 are as follows:

FICTION 

  • Miguel Angel Caballero & Luis Antonio Aldana (USA), The Ballad of Tita and the Machines - In an AI-driven future, an elderly fieldworker is forced to contend with her robot substitute, but when it fails to compete with her she draws the attention of its creators.
  • Ethan Evans & Jess Bartlett (UK), Outside Noise - A woman’s sleep app blurs reality and conjures a terrifying presence in her room.
  • Alexis Gómez (México), Bumbumpapá - A father fights to preserve his daughter’s innocence amid the darkness and uncertainty of war.
  • Meng Han Hsieh (Taiwan) & Menna Morgan (UK), The Test - A woman taking her UK citizenship tests faces hostility and micro-aggressions, escaping into her imagination to express herself.
  • Irene Lopez & Robin Asselmeyer (Sweden), Killing R - In an AI-integrated future a mother fantasizes about destroying her household clone.
  • Linda Ludwig (Germany) & James Curle (UK), Under the Blue - A worn out police officer on a late shift is brought in to investigate a petty crime, finding more than meets the eye.
  • Andrew McGee (UK), First Sight - Luna is finally ready to re-enter the world of dating, but her reliance on her smart contact lenses takes a dark turn.
  • Rossana Montoya (Colombia), My Demon - As they race to the hospital for the imminent birth of their first child, Eva and Jacobo clash over their relationship.
  • Florine & Kim Nüesch (Switzerland), Marriage Unplugged - A couple’s sex robot experiment exposes hidden fractures in their marriage.
  • Robin Takao D'Oench (USA), Fireline - An inmate firefighter who has been denied parole battles a wildfire while yearning to return home.

NON-FICTION

  • César Flores Correa (México), A Field That No Longer Smells of Flowers -In the municipality of Villa Guerrero in Mexico flower growers and their families grapple with the impact of the toxic chemicals used to cultivate the flowers.
  • Will Hewitt & Austen McCowan (UK), Have You Seen The Beast? - The filmmakers probe a mysterious big cat sighting in Wales through a series of eerie local testimonies.
  • Kieran Hodges (New Zealand) & Eduardo Vento (Portugal), Justice Brothers - Young surfers in Ghana help to empower local women through a surf school.
  • Juliet Klottrup (UK), Travelling Home - An English Romany Traveller reflects on his heritage and the annual pilgrimage to Appleby Fair.
  • Annabel Moodie (UK), Friends on the Outside - An incarcerated man finds solace in foraging and connecting to nature.
  • Loic Niyonkuru & Floriane Kaneza (Burundi), Before 16 - A woman recounts her experiences raising her child after a traumatic assault at age 16.
  • Stefan Pollak (UK), ALT Jay - A disabled man’s passion for CrossFit helps break barriers and create community with support from his identical twin.
  • Kirsten Slemint (Australia), Burnt Country - First Nations wisdom, 65,000 years in the making, uses fire to fight fire and offers lessons for Australia’s ecological future.
  • Riah Taipodia (India), Khiew Ranei (Black Clay) - A 9-year-old inherits her village’s pottery tradition, passed down through generations and carefully preserved.
  • Shaquille Zaki Nathandra & Quina Qaumitaquna Mirxela (Indonesia),Tanah Kitai (Our Land) - Borneo’s Iban youth fight to preserve their land and identity against encroaching loss.

ANIMATION

  • Rich Farris (UK), From The Top - Robin grapples with letting go of her drum kit and her passion.
  • Case Jernigan (USA), Noggin - Through a deeply personal narrative, the filmmaker builds ‘a memory palace of love and ink’ exploring life with multiple sclerosis.
  • Santiago O'Ryan & José Navarro (Chile), Hermanos Casablanca (Casablanca Brothers) - At the height of the Pinochet dictatorship, two divers agree to help an army official in the hope of receiving information on their missing sister in return.
  • Fadi Syriani & Jana Wehbe (Lebanon), The Day Vladimir Died - In Beirut, the day-to-day life of an elderly man is punctuated by grief and mourning both for lost friends and for a city undergoing rapid change.
  • Leo Wright (UK), The Big Bad Wolf - Set in an industrial pig society, a wolf and a pig form an unlikely friendship, defying prejudices and the cautionary words of the age-old parable.

STUDENT

  • Luis J. Arellano (México), Centro de Capacitación Cinematográfica. Long Journey Till Dawn - After the death of her young daughter, a grieving mother kidnaps a baby, confronting the darkness within herself.
  • Muhammed Ashfaque (India),  K R Narayanan National Institute of Visual Science and Arts, URA - In Bethlehem, the unexpected arrival of Maria, a pregnant nun, into an isolated convent run by a community of elderly nuns sets off a chain of events.
  • Gianfranco Fernández-Ruiz & Gus Murray (USA), American Film Institute, When Big People Lie - Eight-year-old Elvis witnesses a dramatic family shift when his mother arranges a green card marriage.
  • Hayder Hoozeer (UK) & Franz Böhm (Germany), The National Film & Television School, Rock Paper Scissors - Based on a true story, a father and son in a warzone hospital face life-or-death choices as their hideout becomes increasingly compromised.
  • Faith Olaewe & Doyinsola Ajayi (Nigeria), EbonyLife Creative Academy, Angel in the Stone - Shalewa, a reclusive autistic teenager, uses her metalworking skills to save her family from ruin.

FUTURE FORMAT

Also announced today is the winner and shortlist from this year’s Future Format competition, which champions a new generation of aspiring filmmakers by welcoming short films shot exclusively on a smartphone.

The winner of this year’s Future Format competition is Bijan Gashti (Islamic Republic of Iran) for Select/Or, which explores the tension between control and free will when individuals are left with a single instruction. The shortlisted filmmakers for the Future Format competition are Joni Astin Ariadi (Indonesia) with Sleeping Monster, and Siwei Yu (China Mainland) with Love is the End.

Source: Creo

L'Wren Alexa's picture

Journalist, antique shop owner, aspiring gemologist—L'Wren brings a diverse perspective to animation, where every frame reflects her varied passions.