Repercussion(s) Trailer
The unsolved disappearance of his daughter prompts a grieving father to take matters into his own hands, giving rise to myriad consequences.
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Kelsey NerrieDirector
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Kelsey NerrieWriter
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Rick BickelKey Cast"Jessie's Daddy"
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Victor CollinsDirector of PhotographyWe'll Still Be Here
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Project Type:Short
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Runtime:35 seconds
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Completion Date:February 13, 2026
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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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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:Yes
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Student Project:No
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Seven Cities ShowcaseVirginia Beach, VA
United States
March 28, 2026
Trailer Premiere
Kelsey Nerrie has a storied career across the film industry in addition to excursions into the private sector, publishing, and motherhood.
She is a reader and writer at her core. Growing up, she lived in her local library, inhaling the likes of The Magic Treehouse and Harry Potter series. Her more "grown-up" favorites include Milan Kundera, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, John Knowles, Sally Rooney, and Maggie Stiefvater. Kelsey's dark humor was shaped by British comedies (The Holy Grail, Fawlty Towers) and her love of spectacle and paranormal comedy was influenced by film & tv of the 90s and 2000s, from Independence Day, Demolition Man, and The 6th Day to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Firefly, and Supernatural.
Kelsey’s writing style stems from the prose and narrative structures of "serious" literature and the dry wit of the Flying Circus. Hard-hitting emotions and confronting our true selves is an overarching theme in her writing. She does not tie herself down to a single genre but instead explores truth in whichever genre will resonate with her characters and the journeys they lead her on.
The themes of consequences and their multiverses of potential “other” outcomes has always been of interest to me. When I stepped into the role of director, I realized what I was trying to say: that you never know exactly how a single decision is going to impact the rest of your life -- or the lives of the people you love. I think it comes across on the page, but now I have the opportunity to put my written vision to the test and allow a theatrical audience to decide for themselves.
Is going to the extreme ever acceptable? Can we ever really know where our choices will lead us? And can we live with those consequences, whatever they may be?
Let’s explore the outcomes together.