Thea Hollatz

Thea Hollatz

History

Thea Hollatz works as a set decorator, art director and production designer for film and web projects.

Profile

Thea Hollatz

Movies

Bloody Hell
Production Design
A teenage girl gets diagnosed with a reproductive condition that upends her plans to have sex and propels her into exploring unusual methods to have a sex life, challenging her relationships with everyone in her life, but most importantly, herself.
Ananghoonska
Production Designer
Set within the fluidity of time, touch, realism and reverie. Some may call this magic realism. Based within Indigenous knowledge and way of life, this story allows two people to heal, through touch, calm, love and patience in a fantastical space that leaves the audience dreamlike and yet it is dangerous and violent, there is love.
The Rest of Us
Production Design
Two mother-daughter duos must contend with their grief and complicated relationships with one another when the person who connects them dies.
Hot Flash
Writer
A newscaster is due to go live on local television in the middle of a hot flash, in Thea Hollatz's animated comedy about a woman trying to keep her cool when one type of flash leads to another.
Hot Flash
Director
A newscaster is due to go live on local television in the middle of a hot flash, in Thea Hollatz's animated comedy about a woman trying to keep her cool when one type of flash leads to another.
Firecrackers
Production Design
Lou and her best friend Chantal plan to get out of their isolated, run-down town and move to a city far, far away. When Chantal’s unstable and possessive ex violates her during a night of partying, the girls decide to exact their revenge on him through a night of vandalism and debauchery.
Octavio Is Dead
Set Decoration
The daughter of an overbearing mother enters the rich and strange world of her deceased father — a man she never knew.
Deerbrook
Production Design
Two strangers show up at a family's cottage claiming to have spent their childhood summers there, but their behaviour seems to be driven by something more sinister than nostalgia.
For Dorian
Script Supervisor
A father fears the sexual awakening of his disabled son, a teenager living with Down syndrome, and struggles with the notion of letting him grow up.