South Carolina filmmaker selected as one of five finalists for the American Black Film Festival’s HBO® Short Film Award

June 13, 2022

Columbia, S.C. – A Greenville-based writer and director was recently named one of the five finalists for the American Black Film Festival’s (ABFF) annual HBO® Short Film Award. Destiny Macon’s short film, TALK BLACK, is in the running for a $10,000 grand prize.

The festival will be held in Miami from June 15-19, followed by virtual events on ABFF PLAY from June 20-30.

Macon’s short film, TALK BLACK, follows Mahogany, a timid engineer who develops a wild and expressive split personality to help her speak up to the boy's club at work. It’s a fantastical retelling of Macon’s own experiences working in engineering before she found her true passion – writing and directing.

The film was created with support from the South Carolina Film Commission and Trident Technical College through their INDIE GRANTS program. TALK BLACK was selected for an INDIE GRANT in 2020 and received $30,000 in funding along with professional production support to bring Macon’s vision to life. South Carolina filmmakers can submit their short film projects to be considered in the current INDIE GRANTS funding cycle by August 1.

“In 2020, when I was writing the script for TALK BLACK, I had just watched the hilarious and surprising short film HAIR WOLF on HBO Max,” said Macon. “One of my biggest dreams was to have the same trajectory in my own career by receiving an INDIE GRANT, screening at the American Black Film Festival in Miami, and then having my own short film broadcast on HBO Max. Two years later I'm astonished to see that my exact dream is about to happen in real life!”

“Destiny is a rising star not only in South Carolina’s film industry, but as this recognition makes clear, in the industry as a whole,” said Matt Storm, South Carolina Film Commissioner. “From the moment we read her INDIE GRANTS application, it was obvious that she is an extremely talented individual. TALK BLACK is an incredible short film, and we are all pulling for Destiny to bring home the grand prize. We’re all so excited to see her continued – and hard-earned – success.”

TALK BLACK was shot in Greenville and stars Mystie Smith, Sh’kia Augustin, Dan Thorp, John W. Wright, and Don Henderson Baker. Producers include Brad Jayne, Jonathan Baty, Kisha Imani Cameron, and Smitha Lee.

ABFF is credited with helping expand the range of talent working in the entertainment industry, shining a light on emerging Black artists who work in front of and behind the camera. Previous winners include Ryan Coogler (Black Panther), Steven Caple Jr. (Creed II), Kiel Adrian Scott (The Bobby Brown Story), Saladin K. Patterson (The Big Bang Theory), and Ben Watkins (Burn Notice).

Macon graduated from the University of South Carolina with a degree in Civil Engineering. She co-founded South Carolina’s Upstate Filmmaker’s Network, completed the Wide Angle program, and has a screenwriting certificate from the University of California, Los Angeles. In 2020, she started Hush Girl Productions, LLC, which offers freelance screenwriting and consulting services to writers and media companies. Macon recently wrapped up work on a Hallmark Mahogany movie and intends to continue learning and growing so that she can bring the feature film version of TALK BLACK to life.

 

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