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In Partnership With:

Ghetto Film School and Fifth Season

This year, Ghetto Film School ROSTER, Deutsche Bank, Frieze, and FIFTH SEASON presented the 5th edition of the Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award Fellowship. 

6-8 emerging Los Angeles-based filmmakers ages 18-34 embarked upon a rigorous, four-month, hybrid fellowship led by Ghetto Film School Roster to produce individual 3-4 minute narrative short films in response to a prompt. The program culminated at Frieze Los Angeles in February 2024 with a Jury Award ($10,000 USD) and Audience Award ($2,500 USD).  

Applicants were invited to explore the theme of “Technological Transformations” and their impact on individuals, societies, relationships, and the environment. Technology is an ever-evolving force that shapes our lives in profound ways, revolutionizing the way we communicate, work, and interact with the world. It has the power to disrupt established norms, create new opportunities, and challenge our perceptions of reality.

Through this theme, applicants were encouraged to explore both the positive and negative implications of technological advancements, touching upon topics such as artificial intelligence, virtual reality, metaverse, robotics, and more. The films could be set in the present, near future, or even in speculative or dystopian worlds, showcasing the potential consequences and opportunities brought forth by technological innovations.

View the Films Here

Kaylen Ng Wins 2024 Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award,
Britt Williams Lands Audience Award

Kaylen Ng was named as the recipient of the $10,000 Deutsche Bank Frieze Los Angeles Film Award on Friday at the renowned art fair. Meanwhile, Britt Williams was announced as the winner of the $2,500 Audience Award, voted for by the public. 

Ng and Williams received their prizes during a special invitation-only ceremony at the fair. Realized in collaboration with acclaimed non-profit Ghetto Film School and global film and TV studio Fifth Season, the Frieze Los Angeles Film Award has been widely recognized within the industry as an incubator for next-generation talent. 

Ng is a first-generation Singaporean American producer and writer with a degree in creative producing and virtual production from Chapman University’s Dodge College. She was a 2022 Coca-Cola Refreshing Films finalist and a 2023 Television Academy Foundation Star Trek Command Training Program fellow. With previous experience at Proximity Media, Starz and Lionsgate, Ng currently works as the executive assistant to the president of film and television at Justin Simien’s Culture Machine. She also produces live events and podcasts.

Her film, “The Metamorphosis Project,” tells the story of Eric, who is given the opportunity to test a virtual-living experience after a harrowing diagnosis. 

A jury comprised of leading art and entertainment professionals selected Ng’s winning film, with members including Fifth Season VP of TV development and production Mina Baban, artist José Davila, writer and director Julio Quintana, Ghetto Film School CEO Montea Robinson and 1Community head of content Ameet Shukla, alongside Frieze director of Americas Christine Messineo and Deutsche Bank’s head of private bank and management board member Claudio de Sanctis. 

“I am delighted that Frieze Los Angeles, taking place in the home and heart of the film industry, is celebrating the fifth Deutsche Bank Film Award this year,” Messineo said. “Now it is more important than ever to foster opportunities for emerging talent, and that impact can be seen in our support of over 40 fellows since the Award initiated in 2019.”

Audience Award winner Williams is a writer and director based in Los Angeles, who recently completed her studies as a directing fellow at the American Film Institute. Williams previously programmed a film series at Doc Films while pursuing her bachelor’s degree at the University of Chicago and enrolled in night film classes at the School of Visual Arts while working in digital marketing in New York. Her work uses humor to explore Black characters who are confronted with their own internal contradictions, reflecting her interest in community, femininity, and narratives of Black progress.

Her film, “Soft Launch,” follows a controversial tech CEO as she defends her latest software to a journalist ahead of its launch. As the interview grows increasingly antagonistic, the CEO secretly grapples with her desire to unleash the technology on the world.