Daniella Kahane

Фильмы

Когда мы познакомились
Executive Producer
Молодому парню по имени Ной посчастливилось встретить идеальную девушку и провести с ней идеальную ночь. Но после этого на него был повешен ярлык «просто друг», и лишь спустя долгих три года Ною выпадает шанс разобраться, в чём он оплошал. Отправившись в прошлое, Ной снова и снова переживает незабываемое свидание в надежде на другой финал.
Маленькие мужчины
Executive Producer
Чувствительный подросток Джейк вместе с матерью переезжает в Бруклин. В первый день на новом месте он знакомится с ровесником — бойким Тони. Мальчишки становятся настоящими друзьями, и все свободное время они проводят вместе. Но однажды их дружбе едва не пришел конец по вине их родителей, которые поссорились из-за разногласий по стоимости арендной платы за квартиру.
A Mighty Nice Man
Producer
Patricia Highsmith's haunting story of a day in a young girl's life when a kind stranger comes to town.
Growing Up Barnard
Writer
Are women’s colleges a dying breed? In the past forty years over 75% of women’s colleges have closed or merged with their male counterparts. What will or should become of them in the next fifty years? Compelled by her family’s four-generation legacy at Barnard College, Daniella Kahane (BC ’05) explores the relevance of women’s colleges today, specifically through understanding the history of Barnard College and the changing role of women during the twentieth century.
Growing Up Barnard
Director
Are women’s colleges a dying breed? In the past forty years over 75% of women’s colleges have closed or merged with their male counterparts. What will or should become of them in the next fifty years? Compelled by her family’s four-generation legacy at Barnard College, Daniella Kahane (BC ’05) explores the relevance of women’s colleges today, specifically through understanding the history of Barnard College and the changing role of women during the twentieth century.
Growing Up Barnard
Are women’s colleges a dying breed? In the past forty years over 75% of women’s colleges have closed or merged with their male counterparts. What will or should become of them in the next fifty years? Compelled by her family’s four-generation legacy at Barnard College, Daniella Kahane (BC ’05) explores the relevance of women’s colleges today, specifically through understanding the history of Barnard College and the changing role of women during the twentieth century.