Mary Kwon is an English professor at a community college. One day, she drops her classes mid-semester, and journeys to an isolated house in the woods. The house where, decades ago, her mother was put under arrest and went missing. As Mary tries doing some self-healing and creative writing work, she notices odd noises in the home and surrounding forest. At night, two visitors drop in: Terrence and Granger. They are a couple of mysterious hikers, and Terrence suffers a sudden psychosomatic illness. Mary uses her wiles to help him recover, but as the night continues, things around them just get stranger and stranger.
Josh Park is a Bay Area-based filmmaker of the Korean diaspora. He is a graduate of the Cinema MFA program at San Francisco State University, and works at his alma mater as the Cinema Tech. His work has shown at Buffalo International Film Festival, Boston Asian American Film Festival, Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival, Night of Shorts, and others. He occasionally teaches film to students in the Bay Area.
Since 1978, the Asian American International Film Festival, produced by Asian CineVision, is the nation’s first and longest running festival of its kind and the premier showcase for the best Asian independent and Asian American cinema. AAIFF is committed to film and media as a tool for social change and to the support of diversity and inclusion in independent cinema and the Asian American media arts.