Presented by Directors Guild of Canada

North American premiere
Septentrion Shadows

Self Driver

Directed by Michael Pierro

Hosted by Director/Writer/Producer Michael Pierro, Producer Kire Paputts, Actor Chadwick Nathanael

Credits  

Official selection

Fantaspoa 2024

Honors

Best Film - (Low Budgets, Great Films competition) Fantaspoa, 2024

Director

Michael Pierro

Producer

Kire Paputts, Michael Pierro

Writer

Michael Pierro

Cast

Christian Aldo, Nathanael Chadwick, Catt Filippov, Welchner Lauren, Reece Presley

Cinematographer

Michael Pierro

Sound Designer

Lucas Prokaziuk

Composer

Antonio Naranjo

Editor

Michael Pierro

contact

Summo Duo Inc

Official website

Canada 2024 90 mins OV English Subtitles : English
Genre Thriller

At the end of his rope, a newly redundant office drone (Nathanael Chadwick, THE LAST PORNO SHOW) takes a rideshare driver job, but the gig isn’t making ends meet, and he’s missing bill payments, avoiding calls from his landlord, and not spending time with his partner and new baby. Days of frustrating bookings, from bickering couples to puking party girls, reach a boiling point. When a slick passenger tells him about a new, well-paying driving gig at a company called Tonomo, our driver makes the call and starts immediately to cash in. This new job comes with rules, however—obey the app’s instructions, don’t talk to passengers, and finish the ride, or he’ll lose all his money. He soon learns that these are hard and fast rules and that he’s at the mercy of the app and its mysterious, often psycho customers, both of which will put him in situations that test his conscience and morals.

Director and writer Michael Pierro shot his gritty debut feature in the back alleys of Toronto with a small crew and his producer, Kire Paputts. Along with tension-relieving laughs, Chadwick’s honest performance puts us in his shoes, grappling with moral dilemmas, and Reece Presley’s (IN A VIOLENT NATURE) creepy turn as “Bro” is unforgettable! This low-budget thriller takes a sinister, absurdist look at gig workers and the evils of an economy that creates desperation and questionable morals, all in the name of the almighty dollar. – Carolyn Mauricette

Showings