Director: Hollie Olenik
Short: Narrative
Drama |
Canada |
6 min
View trailer
A middle-aged woman makes a last-ditch effort to sell her eye-sore car to an optimistic teenage rocker. This goes smoothly until they find a time capsule of forgotten items from her youth. Bonding over discovered similar interests, they try to maneuver through the generational gap, nostalgia, and envy of each other’s lives.
Born & raised in Oshawa, Ontario (with a penchant for the dramatic), Hollie Olenik is a Toronto-based writer and director. She is in her fifth year of film production at Ryerson’s School of Image Arts. Hollie has written & directed multiple short films including narratives Ophelia, Your Mileage May Vary, and an experimental piece, Liminal. Her work has been broadcasted on the CBC and has screened at festivals such as the Youth Lens Film Festival and Rendezvous with Madness Film Festival. She recently received Image Arts’ Norman Jewison Filmmaker Award for her work on Your Mileage May Vary. Hollie is focused on challenging and deconstructing the film industry to create a broader space for radical stories and she draws much of her inspiration for stories about LGBTQ+ women from her own experiences growing up queer. Outside of film she is also interested in writing for theatre and theatre production.
Hollie’s most recent film was Dirt Town, her thesis film, centered on growing up in Oshawa, which premiered at the Ryerson University Film Festival last year. To see more of her work follow her personal Instagram @probablyhollie & her thesis Instagram @dirttownfilm