FILMS
Revolutionary art takes time to sink its talons into the collective unconscious.
We believe in fearless storytelling and giving agency to creators to make bold choices. We embrace modernity while challenging the culture it permeates. We yearn to cultivate an ecosystem built on the understanding that our existence is always changing, always altering, and that we are nothing but stardust being batted around by the infitie chaos of the universe. It is within that chaos though, that we find purpose, we find beauty, we find pain, and we find love. At OXYMORONIC, we translate those feelings, forged in the chaos, into images and sounds stitched together to construct narratives that are inherently singular, yet ultimately universal, while trying to grasp the contradiction and oxymorons contained within us all.
THE RABBIT HOLE
THE RABBIT HOLE
“Isaac, a neurotic tree-hugger, builds a god-like supercomputer in order to save the natural world. But, when the machine comes to life and his existence begins to crumble, Isaac is forced to choose between destiny and the person he loves most.”
100 Minutes | 2025 | English | 16:9
Patrick Perih as Isaac
Clinton Powell as Pan
Terra Layne as Lili
Michael Takiff as Horus Howard III
Written and Directed by Sam Jonas
Produced by Nick Schoenbrodt
FILMMAKER STATEMENT
“The Rabbit Hole is my first feature film. It was made on an ultra low-budget (under $25,000) with primarily a crew of 3 people, one light, one lens, and was shot mostly in my 200 square-foot NYC studio apartment. I wrote, directed, edited, shot, production designed, and sound mixed this film by myself. It is an “independent film” in the truest sense of the phrase. Making this film was an unwavering labor of love, and, I believe, is a testament to the will-power and artistry of independent filmmaking. The film works to contextualize human’s relationship to each other, civilization, and the natural world, and questions whether we exist in harmony with it/each other, or are actively destroying our only home while distorting our collective sense of self.” - Sam Jonas