Based in Frankfurt, Paris and New York, we are a collective of filmmakers whose projects are aimed at challenging the status quo. We believe in the power of art to effect large-scale changes in society, and endeavor to create bold, original films that provoke our audiences to think, to question conventional narratives and easy solutions, and also to re-draw the lines and divisions that demarcate us, turning human beings so often against one another. We also hope to make films that will make people laugh. And cry. And get upset. But mostly laugh.

Our first project was the explosive French film, Trop, c'est trop (I've Had Enough!), set in the French Pyrenees. The film follows Juliette, a journalist whose public renunciation live on TV, in protest of her company's journalistic practices, ignites a huge scandal. She repairs to the south of France, where she joins a bizarre workshop aimed at confronting society's ills.

We're looking for fellow artists and producers alike who might be interested in working with us. We'd be happy to hear from you, and to share more extensive details about these projects.








Arta Ramadani is a German TV journalist and author. Her work deals with current problems in Germany, with a focus on social issues. In 2012 her television report on discrimination against migrants in the school system was awarded with the Kausa Medien Prize, donated by the Federal Ministry for Education and Research. In 2014 her TV report Superstition was nominated for the "Alternative Media Prize." She discovered her passion for journalism at a young age, and as a teenager hosted a radio show. She is also familiar with the film world as she worked as a student at the Berlinale Film Festival. Her debut novel The Journey to the First Kiss was published in March 2018 by Drava Verlag, and premiered at the Leipzig Book Fair. Her novel is a declaration of love for democracy, peace and music.


John M. Keller is an American novelist, the author of five books of fiction, A Bald Man With No Hair, Know Your Baker, The Box and the Briefcase, Abracadabrantesque and Johnny Allan. He has taught writing at the City University of New York, the Universidad de las Américas in Mexico, the Universidad de Montevideo in Uruguay and St. Xavier’s College in Mumbai, India. Mi Casa, Su Casa, a script he co-wrote with French filmmaker Sara Verhagen, was selected at over forty festivals in 2016 and '17, and won seven prizes, including several for the writing. Six and Midnight Films' first project, Trop c'est trop (I've Had Enough!), was his directorial début.

Eléa Clair is a French actress, known for numerous roles on French television, including recurring roles in Déjà Vu on France 2 and Plus belle la vie on France 3. She's appeared on such series as Interventions, Clem, Palmashow, Commissariat central, On va s'aimer un peu, beaucoup and Ad Vitam, which was selected in 2018 at the International Festival de la Rochelle in France. Fluent in English, she starred in Italian filmmaker Liana Marabini's English-language film, Mothers, alongside Christopher Lambert and Remo Girone and in American Robert M. Cluesman's indie feature, Flasher. She has also directed three short films: Commerce (pas très) équitable (Unfair Trade), Limbo and The Amazings, and she co-produced Six and Midnight Films' first short film, Trop, c'est trop (I've Had Enough!). She is represented in France by Filmtalents and by Cre8 Talent in the UK.




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