Marcus DeLeon

Фильмы

Walkout
Teleplay
Walkout is the true story of a young Mexican American high school teacher, Sal Castro. He mentors a group of students in East Los Angeles, when the students decide to stage a peaceful walkout to protest the injustices of the public school system. Set against the background of the civil rights movement of 1968, it is a story of courage and the fight for justice and empowerment.
El Aroma del Copal
Writer
A petroleum engineer from Texas travels to an oil operation in Central America where he clashes with his boss, romances two women, and finds himself caught in a guerrilla war.
Тело женщины
Writer
Карточный шулер Бенни, случайно оказавшийся в городе, заводит знакомство с симпатичной барменшей Таней, чей муж решил распорядиться семейными деньгами по своему усмотрению. Заручившись поддержкой Тани, Бенни проявляет все свои способности, чтобы завладеть деньгами...
Тело женщины
Director
Карточный шулер Бенни, случайно оказавшийся в городе, заводит знакомство с симпатичной барменшей Таней, чей муж решил распорядиться семейными деньгами по своему усмотрению. Заручившись поддержкой Тани, Бенни проявляет все свои способности, чтобы завладеть деньгами...
Kiss Me a Killer
Writer
An ex-convict (Robert Beltran) and his lover (Julie Carmen) plot to kill her husband (Guy Boyd), owner of a nightclub in east Los Angeles.
Kiss Me a Killer
Director
An ex-convict (Robert Beltran) and his lover (Julie Carmen) plot to kill her husband (Guy Boyd), owner of a nightclub in east Los Angeles.
Border Radio
Producer
Before carving out a niche as one of the most distinct voices in nineties American cinema, Allison Anders made her debut, alongside codirectors and fellow UCLA film school students Kurt Voss and Dean Lent, with 1987’s Border Radio. A low-key, semi-improvised postpunk diary that took four years to complete, Border Radio features legendary rocker Chris D., of the Flesh Eaters, as a singer/songwriter who has stolen loot from a club and gone missing, leaving his wife (Luanna Anders), a no-nonsense rock journalist, to track him down with the help of his friends (John Doe of the band X; Chris Shearer). With its sprawling Southern Californian and Mexican landscapes, captured in evocative 16mm black and white, Border Radio is a singular, DIY memento of the indie film explosion in America.