Watch Today’s FREE Festival: Winning DOC Shorts Festival

Watch the festival at 8PM EST FOR FREE by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/events/winning-doc-shorts-festival

KosherSoul, 13min., USA
Directed by Ilja Sarro
James-Beard-Award-winning author and culinary historian, Michael W. Twitty emphasizes that cooking is not just about the recipe, but the people who create it. He highlights the importance of representation in the culinary world, particularly among chefs of color, and how their unique backgrounds contribute to the richness of the food they prepare. This documentation encapsulates the essence of culinary identity and community.

https://www.isdesigns-studio.com/koshersoul

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-koshersoul

I’M TRYING, 33min., Canada
Directed by Raymond Cruzzola
I’m Trying is a powerful portrait of Regan Russell — an animal rights activist killed in 2020 during a peaceful protest outside a slaughterhouse — and the ongoing fight for justice she inspired.

https://www.instagram.com/imtryingfilm/

https://wildsound.vhx.tv/videos/audience-feedback-i-m-trying

Watch CHILDREN IN EXILE (DOC Feature Winner – in case you missed it)

Watch the festival by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/doc-feature-film-winner-wait-until-tomorrow

Children in Exile, 58min., USA
Directed by Christopher Swider
In Children in Exile survivors of Soviet deportation to Siberia describe their experiences as the youngest victims of the Soviet system. These crimes against humanity have never been legally confronted, and as one of the interviewed victims states, “a crime should be called a crime.”

http://opus27productions.net/

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-children-in-exile

Watch Today’s FREE Festival: CHILDREN IN EXILE (DOC Feature Winner)

Watch the festival at 8PM EST FOR FREE by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/events/children-in-exile-doc-feature-winner

Children in Exile, 58min., USA
Directed by Christopher Swider
In Children in Exile survivors of Soviet deportation to Siberia describe their experiences as the youngest victims of the Soviet system. These crimes against humanity have never been legally confronted, and as one of the interviewed victims states, “a crime should be called a crime.”

http://opus27productions.net/

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-children-in-exile

Watch the DOC SOCIETY Shorts Festival (in case you missed it)

Watch the festival by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://festivalreviews.org/2025/10/03/watch-todays-free-festival-doc-society-shorts-festival-2/

Conscious Co-Working, 22min., Mexico
Directed by Matt Crowe
Conscious Co-Working is an award winning heart-led documentary exploring the rise of spiritually conscious entrepreneurship and community in the digital age. Set in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, the film follows a global tribe of creatives, healers, spiritual digital nomads, and conscious entrepreneurs who are redefining work as a sacred act of self-expression, collaboration, and inner growth. Through intimate interviews, rituals, and raw moments of transformation, the film captures how a coworking space became a sanctuary for purpose-driven humans building businesses that align with soul and service. This is not just about work – it’s about healing, connection, and the future of how we live and create together.

https://instagram.com/conscious_coworking

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedbackconscious-co

THROW IT BACK, 8min,. Canada
Directed by Vicente Gacitua, Lucas Vollicks
A story about a young man who started his own vintage store in North Bay called Talbots Throwback, and he shows and explains his love of vintage items and explains why it is so important to keep these items alive.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-throw-it-back

THE PLAZA OF TIME, 11min., China
Directed by Xinyuan He
The Plaza of Time is an observational documentary directed by a teenage dancer, chronicling the lives of three elder performers—Auntie Yuan, Auntie Zhang, and Mr. Li—who each bring their own rhythm, resilience, and reason to dance on the public plazas of urban China.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-the-plaza-of-time

NIGHT SHIFT, 29min,. Ukraine
Directed by Megumi Lim
In the still hours of Kharkiv’s curfewed nights, a quiet resilience hums through its empty streets. Night Shift is a short film about people who work under the cover of darkness, navigating both routine and risk as Russia often attacks when residents try to sleep. Those who stay awake to work do so for the city’s survival. The film explores how nighttime in Ukraine’s second largest city has transformed because of war, its nightly hope that dawn will arrive quietly, and the human need to carry on.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-night-shift

Watch Today’s FREE Festival: DOC SOCIETY Shorts Festival

Watch the festival at 8PM EST FOR FREE by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/events/doc-society-shorts-festival-october

Conscious Co-Working, 22min., Mexico
Directed by Matt Crowe
Conscious Co-Working is an award winning heart-led documentary exploring the rise of spiritually conscious entrepreneurship and community in the digital age. Set in Playa del Carmen, Mexico, the film follows a global tribe of creatives, healers, spiritual digital nomads, and conscious entrepreneurs who are redefining work as a sacred act of self-expression, collaboration, and inner growth. Through intimate interviews, rituals, and raw moments of transformation, the film captures how a coworking space became a sanctuary for purpose-driven humans building businesses that align with soul and service. This is not just about work – it’s about healing, connection, and the future of how we live and create together.

https://instagram.com/conscious_coworking

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedbackconscious-co

THROW IT BACK, 8min,. Canada
Directed by Vicente Gacitua, Lucas Vollicks
A story about a young man who started his own vintage store in North Bay called Talbots Throwback, and he shows and explains his love of vintage items and explains why it is so important to keep these items alive.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-throw-it-back

THE PLAZA OF TIME, 11min., China
Directed by Xinyuan He
The Plaza of Time is an observational documentary directed by a teenage dancer, chronicling the lives of three elder performers—Auntie Yuan, Auntie Zhang, and Mr. Li—who each bring their own rhythm, resilience, and reason to dance on the public plazas of urban China.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-the-plaza-of-time

NIGHT SHIFT, 29min,. Ukraine
Directed by Megumi Lim
In the still hours of Kharkiv’s curfewed nights, a quiet resilience hums through its empty streets. Night Shift is a short film about people who work under the cover of darkness, navigating both routine and risk as Russia often attacks when residents try to sleep. Those who stay awake to work do so for the city’s survival. The film explores how nighttime in Ukraine’s second largest city has transformed because of war, its nightly hope that dawn will arrive quietly, and the human need to carry on.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-night-shift

Watch Today’s FREE Festival: LIVING 1 NEW DAY (Human Interest DOC Feature)

Watch the festival at 8PM EST FOR FREE by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/events/living-1-new-day-human-interest-doc-feature

Living 1 new day, 52min., France
Directed by Pierre Aragou
A powerful documentary that raises the vital issue of raising awareness and understanding of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Two life stories and a free voice on trauma and suicidal behaviour. Christophe, a police officer, and Sébastien, a soldier, give us their personal accounts, enlightened by psychiatrist Christophe Debien. They confide in us openly and generously, because their words hold the keys to remanence.

http://www.pierrearagou.com/

https://www.instagram.com/pierre_aragou

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-living-1-new-day

Watch the DOC SOCIETY Shorts Festival (in case you missed it)

Watch the festival by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/doc-society-shorts-festival

BEEKIND, 11min. Canada
Directed by Olivia Bronwyn
Follow Gregg Scott and the keepers of Circling Hawk Honey & Mead, as we’re taken under their wing to get an up-close look at the species so relied upon by our kind. Beekind gives insight on the nature of the honeybee as a member of the colony, their interactions and relationships to each other and to humans, as we look within, and take one big sustainable step back. We’re welcomed into Circling Hawk, the business and home of Gregg and Michelle Scott, our owners and operators, and caretakers of the 25 acres of land. Alongside their two protégé’s Julia and John, they take us on their journey as stewards, artists, and guides to the life they lead at the apiary. A life of peace, love, and earthly balance.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-beekind

Surviving Alone: The Tale of Simone, 15min., UK
Directed by Claire Tomlinson
Simone is the last Greater Bamboo Lemur in Ranomafana, a protected rainforest in south-east Madagascar. After a happy start in life, surrounded by family, Simone finds herself alone, as members of her family disappear one by one. Three years on, and she’s still alone – a social animal, a primate, just like us; how has this isolation affected her mental state?

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-surviving-alone

Watch Mitote – Smokey Mirror, 9min., South Korea, Music/Dance (new film on the platform)

Sign up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch the festival here: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/watch-mitote-smokey-mirror

In today’s world us humans have developed a complex social system of rules and expectations. Children are taught from the day they are born on how they are expected to behave. They are told what is right and wrong, what is possible and what not. That is, by the standards of the children’s parents and other people in their surroundings, in other words the society they grow up in.

These seemingly endless rules and regulations lead many of us humans to live a life encaged by society. We constantly worry about what other people think. In addition, we let the limitations of our brain capacity to predict the future decide that “it’ is impossible” or “this is not okay” or “that is not how it should be done”. The old Mesoamerican culture Toltecs referred to this problem as the ‘Mitote’ – or translated ‘the smokey
mirror’.

CAST: Isabella Koester, Hyojin Kim, Sun-Ah Kim

https://instagram.com/jaystorm24.mov

Director Statement
Mitote

Small children are curios, creative and adventurous. When eating, children will eat with their hands until we teach them how to eat with fork and knife, or with chopsticks. So depending on which part of the world you were born in, you will think differently on how you should act when you eat. But what if you feel more comfortable with using a spoon upside down to eat? Is that a problem? Yes, because it does not fit into our society, but technically if that is the most convenient way for you to eat, why should you not do it? Who does it hurt if you eat like that?

These social constructs were developed in part to make living together as humans as unproblematic as possible. At the same time people of higher status to use them differentiate themselves from those of lower status. These seemingly endless rules and regulations lead many of us humans to live a life encaged by society. We constantly worry about what other people think. In addition, we let the limitations of our brain capacity to predict the future decide that “it’ is impossible” or “this is not okay” or “that is not how it should be done”.

The old Mesoamerican culture Toltecs referred to this problem as the ‘Mitote’ – or translated smoke mirror. They were known for their philosophy, artistry and religious beliefs. In Toltec philosophy all humans live in their own dream, not just when they are sleeping but also when they are awake. This refers to how the society we live in dictates how our mindset should see the world. We will always see the world subjectively, since we are subjects – human – not objects. From a negative perspective that means our mind creates endless unnecessary limitations on the possibilities of life.

In an old Toltec saying there was a man who dreamt that he was in space. In space the stars created light and he himself reflected that light. He then realized that all humans are mirrors, since they reflect the light that comes from the stars in our universe. This means that we are all the same but the problem is many of us cannot see it because of the fog in our mind. This fog represents the limiting misconceptions that we have about the world, which prevents us from seeing it in its full beauty and reaching our true potentials.

The uncertainty stemming from this subjectively distorted view of the world in the human mind is the Mitote, the foggy mirror. We all are Mitote. But once we realize the basis of our society’s subjective world view, we can change our mindset by actively training against the misassumptions in our brains. The Toltecs believed we can change the way we perceive our life and thus how we feel, how we act and how our own future will unfold. Through this piece I want to showcase how our emotional state of mind reflects on the outside world and the people around us, and that we can change it at any given time.

Watch Today’s FREE Festival: DOC SOCIETY Shorts Festival

Watch the festival at 8PM EST FOR FREE by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/events/doc-society-shorts-festival

BEEKIND, 11min. Canada
Directed by Olivia Bronwyn
Follow Gregg Scott and the keepers of Circling Hawk Honey & Mead, as we’re taken under their wing to get an up-close look at the species so relied upon by our kind. Beekind gives insight on the nature of the honeybee as a member of the colony, their interactions and relationships to each other and to humans, as we look within, and take one big sustainable step back. We’re welcomed into Circling Hawk, the business and home of Gregg and Michelle Scott, our owners and operators, and caretakers of the 25 acres of land. Alongside their two protégé’s Julia and John, they take us on their journey as stewards, artists, and guides to the life they lead at the apiary. A life of peace, love, and earthly balance.

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-beekind

Surviving Alone: The Tale of Simone, 15min., UK
Directed by Claire Tomlinson
Simone is the last Greater Bamboo Lemur in Ranomafana, a protected rainforest in south-east Madagascar.
After a happy start in life, surrounded by family, Simone finds herself alone, as members of her family disappear one by one.
Three years on, and she’s still alone – a social animal, a primate, just like us; how has this isolation affected her mental state?

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-surviving-alone

NOTHING BUT BLUE, 16min., Germany
Directed by Sebastian Bechtel
NOTHING BUT BLUE is a 16-minute short film about German Olympic surfer Tim Elter – and his uncompromising passion for one of the most extreme and primal forms of surfing: tube riding.

https://www.instagram.com/nothingbutblue_film/

https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/audience-feedback-nothing-but-blue

Watch the DRAMA Shorts Festival (in case you missed it)

Watch the festival by signing up for the FREE 3-DAY trial using the link, or go to http://www.wildsound.ca

Watch today’s Festival: https://www.wildsound.ca/videos/drama-festival-winners

Lovebirds, 4min., USA
Directed by Maria Corso
Betty and Ray, a wild couple on the run, live fast and love hard while staying one step ahead of the law. With their lives on the line and a clean getaway just out of reach, they attempt one more job — one which may cost them more than they can afford.

https://www.mariacorso.com/
https://www.instagram.com/mariacorso/

Snapshots, 84min., Spain
Directed by Miguel Ángel Mengó
Snapshots reflects twelve dialogues without beginning or end, held between twenty-four characters, inhabitants of the outskirts of a city, at some point in their lives, always marked by incommunication and time lost in the era of access to information and immediacy.