Here you can find a collection of my work in film-making.
November 19th 2022 – Unbelieve
Written & Directed by Noah Mifsud
Description: Three friends go to play in the forest. When two mysteriously disappear, the third is left to try and figure out what happened.
Made for Halloween, I used this an an opportunity to practice using new equipment and workflows!
June 4th 2020 – Morning Rhythm
Written & Directed by : Noah Mifsud
Score: Noah Mifsud & Jeremy Guenza-Marcus
Description: A student wakes up and makes breakfast. The sounds of their morning routine are then mixed into music.
Created as the final project for a film-score class, this was meant to blur the line between score and foley in an interesting way. The film also highlights the beauty in everyday life during the Covid lockdown.
January 22nd, 2018 – Eugene IHS Advertisement (Professional)
Directed & Edited by: Noah Mifsud
Description: A collection of interviews from Eugene IHS Alumni. Designed for use as marketing material to attract new students.
This was my first professional film. Leadership from the Eugene IHS program approached me (a former IHS student) because they remembered my work for the IHS student-government as a film-maker. They contracted me to produce this advertisement highlighting the benefits of an IHS education.
October 8th, 2017- The Neverending List
Written & Directed by: Noah Mifsud
Edited and Produced by : Jordan Harding
Description: A modern retelling and spoof of Homer’s The Odyssey.
Created as a project for an ancient-literature course, this film was a ton of fun to film and edit as we tried to tell a compelling and logical story while spoofing one of the most well know adventures in human history. See if you can spot all the references!
May 2016 – Axeman Pageant Introduction Video
Created by Noah Mifsud and Brennen McCulloch
Description: Introducing your 2015 Axeman Pageant contestants with brief reenactments of scenes from their favorite movies including Aladdin, Hunger Games and Titanic!
This was one of the most challenging projects of my highschool career. With a 22 minute total runtime and featuring 18 contestants divided into scenes from nine different movies it was immensely organizationally challenging. The end result, however, is one of which I am proud.