Fierro
Richard Fierro, the Army veteran credited with stopping the Club Q mass shooter, recounts the life experiences that led up to his heroic actions. Fierro’s bold insights on diversity, courage, and unity remind us what it takes to make America a beacon of hope for all.
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Edward TyndallDirectorHeartbreak Country, The Cheech, The Good From the Bad, Mission, Reconvergence, Where is Medicine Mound TX?, Deconfliction, Sadie's Waltz, Bottle Tree, Falfurrias (writer), To the Green Valley (Writer), Tasmanian Tiger (Writer)
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Tyler BrodieProducerThis World is Not My Own, Ted K, The Public Image is Rotten, Memory Box, The Wolf Pack, For the Plasma, I Origins, In God We Trust. Towheads, 99%: The Occupy Wall Street Collective Film, It Felt Like Love, Reconvergence, The Forgiveness of Blood, Another Earth, Terri, Until the Light Takes Us, I'm Gonna Explode, Zero Bridge, Memorial Day, Momma's Man, You See Me Laughin', The Ballad of Ramblin' Jack, Pi
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Richard FierroKey Cast"himself "
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Salvatore GiuntaKey Cast"himself "
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Jennifer GriffenKey Cast"herself "
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John BermanKey Cast"himself "
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Lester HoltKey Cast"himself "
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Project Title (Original Language):Fierro
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Project Type:Documentary, Short
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Runtime:28 minutes 58 seconds
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Completion Date:February 1, 2024
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Country of Origin:United States
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Country of Filming:United States
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Language:English
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Shooting Format:Digital
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Aspect Ratio:16:9
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
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St. Louis International Film FestivalSt Louise International Film Festival
United States
November 15, 2024
Distribution Information
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Kim TyndallSales AgentCountry: Worldwide
Edward Tyndall’s award-winning documentaries have screened at top international film festivals including the Tribeca and BFI London film festivals. His films have aired on television in the US and Canada and been distributed internationally. His fiction has been published nationally in anthology and through literary journals. Originally from Durham, North Carolina he now calls Denver, Colorado home.
As a filmmaker and Army veteran, I was immediately drawn to Rich’s story. I could tell he was aghast at having suffered violent trauma in the most unlikely of places, at a drag show with friends and family. He seemed in disbelief that, after surviving multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, he could be forced to confront such horror unexpectedly. Nevertheless, I could also tell he was in familiar territory. I wanted the documentary Fierro to explore that duality, the fact that Rich’s violent experience in war had prepared him to act in this moment but had also wounded him forever. It’s the great irony of war that its destructive nature imparts certain skills and instincts in soldiers that play no part in the civilian world. Often those soldiers are forced to live with their changed nature in shame, guarding their friends and family from a part of themselves cultivated by the state that is never truly decommissioned. Sometimes this nature is borne out in quite suffering, sometimes in self-destructive rage, and sometimes in moments of great bravery. Regardless, the person has been changed forever. That’s what I’m interested in, the collision of violence and compassion in the human heart, and how different people choose to express that eternal struggle, especially those that have sacrificed so much in our name.