Mike Stoltz

Most Popular Mike Stoltz Trailers

Total trailers found: 11

If You Can't See My Mirrors, I Can't See You Trailer (2016)

28 April 2016

"...flattened images are dictated by actions happening outside of the frame. Choreography of bouncy balls and water fountains are involved.

Holographic Will Trailer (2023)

11 November 2023

A domestic swirl filmed while the building was being sold. How much longer can we afford to stay? A kaleidoscopic portrait of destabilization during the struggle to stay in a rent-controlled apartment amidst an affordable housing crisis.

Spotlight On A Brick Wall Trailer (2016)

08 October 2016

An abstracted nightclub performance, its constituent parts—stand-up comedy, a capella, a laconic bass-and-drum rock duo, a slapstick mime—wrenched apart and recombined.

Under the Atmosphere Trailer (2014)

06 September 2014

Mike Stoltz pays wistful tribute to his childhood home on Central Florida's "Space Coast," the site of NASA's Kennedy Space Center.

With Pluses and Minuses Trailer (2013)

01 January 2013

“This morning the window blew its glass onto my face. Real morning with pluses and minuses: my symbols for truth.

Something to Touch That Is Not Corruption or Ashes or Dust Trailer (2020)

27 March 2020

Fences, zooms, blast beats, and oscillators search for possibility or perforation as walls close in, attempting to break free from patterns and spirals as bodies become contained.

In Between Trailer (2010)

01 January 2010

An exercise in permeable architecture, an attempt to walk through walls.

Half Human, Half Vapor Trailer (2015)

15 September 2015

“This project began out of a fascination with a giant sculpture of a dragon attached to a Central Florida mansion.

Testament Trailer (2026)

02 May 2026

When the edge becomes the center.

Artificial Horizons Test Trailer (2026)

02 May 2026

A series of video oscillator to 16mm film tests shot one frame at a time in the middle of the night.

Pinktoned Trailer (2026)

07 March 2026

Stoltz constructed Pinktoned and Pinktoned (Exploded View) using footage of passersby he filmed from his art studio in East Hollywood interspersed with still images from an archive of photographic slides he found at a rummage sale at the Echo Park Film Center.