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Industry | Film Production |
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Headquarters | , |
Website | www |
Mechanical Dreams VR (MDVR) is a VR content production company that produces virtual reality films and television shows.[1] Co-CEOs Lacey Leavitt and Mischa Jakupcak, along with Joe Jacobs, Mara Auster, and Chris Mosson started the virtual reality content company in XXXX and since then they have produced six VR films, 5 of which are directed by women.[2] They are currently housed in the University of Washingtons CoMotion incubation space.[3][4]
Mechanical Dreams VR has made it a priority to shatter the majority of users of VR from being white males from gaming backgrounds, and introduce diverse voices and people into the mix. Hoping to steer the medium's development away from the same male dominated fate as the film industry currently is.[5] MDVR focuses on original, diverse voices in storytelling.[4] Specializing in everything from social justice documentaries to immersive 360° storytelling.[6]
Also known as Eagle Bone, Ch'aak' S'aagi, is the first film produced by MDVR, and was one of the five chosen to be screened at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) as part of the new POP VR section.[7][8] The film is one of the first VR films to be directed by a Native American Filmmaker and Indigenous activist Tracy Rector. As described by the Huffington Post, Eagle Bone is a "lyrical, visually mesmerizing contemplation on indigenous identity, heritage and our relationship to nature".[3]
The film was shot an produced in under 2 weeks to allow for its debut screening at SIFFX, a new 4 day festival within the Seattle International Film Festival.[5][9]
Directed by Lynn Shelton and starring Cherdonna Shinatra, Power is a comedy that portrays "gender-as-drag and the uneasy dynamic between artist and patron".[3]
Directed by a local Seattle queer hispanic filmmaker, Dacia Saenz, this film allows the viewer to be transported into Pride celebrations.[5] Created as an option for viewers to be able to experience a life changing event for whom actually attending may not be a possibility in their life. [3] This short is the pilot episode in a future documentary series about the lives of LGBTQ community members who have experienced discrimination and marginalization before featuring scenes from the Seattle Pride parade.[10]