Two wrongs might
make it right …
When Jeryl’s dream date turns sour, and Lolly remembers why “the one that got away” didn’t stick the first time around, they finally give up the dream of “happily ever after” and embrace the reality of their friendship - the one that nurtured them through childhood will give them the courage to face the future together.
The Creatives
Sasha Carrera
Sasha Carrera (Writer/Producer) is an actor, writer and producer best known as “fiery and complicated” series regular Petra Antonelli in the Baltimore based, award-winning series THESPIAN. On stage, she regularly appears with the Endangered Species (theatre) Project and has been heralded by Theatre Bloom as “one of the most notable members of the ensemble.”
Sasha returned to the Mid-Atlantic after a decade in Los Angeles where, along with performing, she wrote and produced her first short film, MR. HOPEWELL’S REMEDY, inspired by a rural recycling center in Maryland. She holds a BA in theatre from Wesleyan University, completed the New Actors’ Workshop conservatory training program with Mike Nichols and Paul Sills, and holds an Ed.M. from Harvard University.
Sasha won a scholarship to Maine Media for writing SPINSTERS and continues to hone her skills with Karen Kohlhaas, Aretha Sills and the Arvold/Warner Studios. SPINSTERS is her first feature film as a writer and producer.
Writer/Producer
Rahel Grunder
Rahel Grunder (Director) creates authentic, sensitive, and female-driven stories as a writer and director in both fictional and documentary films. Her docudrama EMILIE KEMPIN-SPYRI about Europe's first female lawyer who moved to NYC in 1888 received high critical and public acclaim. The TV comedy DADDYHUNT was broadcast primetime on the biggest Swiss network.
Rahel's short HAPPY TOBIKOMAKI screened at the World of Women Film Festival, the Moscow Short Film Festival, and the Tucson Slow Food Film Festival. Her documentary SWIMMERS OF HOPE won the audience award at the Science et Cité Cinéma festival in Switzerland, and her documentary FARM WOMEN received the audience award at the Regard Bleu festival.
Originally from Zurich, Rahel moved to Los Angeles in 2010 and graduated from the American Film Institute (AFI) in 2012. She speaks four languages, and has an academic background in anthropology, film history, and art history. She’s an avid dancer, and a hiking, running, and cycling enthusiast. She teaches documentary filmmaking at University of Zurich, and is a mentor for the Munich Screenplay Workshop. She’s a member of Women In Film, the Alliance of Women Directors, as well as Glass Elevator.
Director