Into Dust

Into Dust
With mysterious shamanistic superpowers, a shy teenage girl in an isolated U.S. border town turns the tables on the Mexican drug gangsters who killed her father.

Into Dust Episode One



A teenage girl with super powers keeps the peace in her West Texas town.

Here's what people are saying about Episode One:

"How awesome! This turned out great!"
Kirsten McMurray, Assistant to Richard Linklater

"Congratulations on this!"
Brant Rose, The Brant Rose Agency

"VERY well done. Great message." David P. Pray, Superintendent - Clinton High School

"LOVED it! I really loved a superhero character inside a contemporary Latina schoolgirl and also the naturalistic, verite style used in a story involving special powers. I think it has huge potential for getting noticed, for attracting a large, underserved, super-loyal following. And don't lose the ultra-real style (you know what I mean?) That's going to really set it apart."
-Jill Chamberlain, The Screenplay Workshop

"Good for you, kid." - Chuck Conaway, screenwriter of Waiting for Dublin

"Congratulations, Very cool!"
Deena Kalai. PLLC

"Let us know when the next one's ready!" Infynit Hour TV

why make a web series?

One viewer requested an interview for a screenwriting publication he's working on.

What made you make this, he asks... My initial response:

1. I am trying to show the world that a teenage Latina superhero can find an audience -- I want to get the feature made! This web series is an adaptation of a feature script I wrote that was chosen for the 2nd round of consideration for the 2009 Sundance Screenwriting Labs and was a Quarterfinalist in the 2008 Silver Screenwriting Competition.
2. To build a fan-base for the character of Janey Santiago-- it's so hard for an original character/story to compete with stories based on toys like Transformers or classic superheroes that everyone's heard of like Batman... I know investors prefer characters and stories based on something that already exists... The obvious choices were to create a comic book or a web series. An agent advised me to go for the web series, so here it is!
3. Frankly, there are very few female superheroes out there. Wonder Woman is the only one who's had real, lasting success. A lot of male comic book writers don't know what teenage girls want so they write for themselves and the results range from ridiculously muscular She-Ras in skimpy, revealing outfits to Mary Jane trying to figure out what kind of dress to wear from the prom. Never mind how rare it is to have a Latino/a superhero depicted anywhere outside of Los Bros Hernandez' Love and Rockets series (and they're not superheroes, just indie comic characters).

More PRESS:
Into Dust has been mentioned in The Austin Film Society's P.o.V Magazine aka persistenceofvision.org! Here's the link.

(This is post-dated because I obviously want the video to be the first entry on the blog. Apologies for any confusion.-- AQP)