Symphonie Fantastique
"I remember everything..."
Logline: A lone wind ensemble musician photographs an ongoing performance as she's suddenly joined by a past lover.
Synopsis: Soni, a wind ensemble musician, photographs an ongoing performance from an empty room above. Soni and her thoughts occupy the space as Diego, a past lover, suddenly joins her. The two converse and the surreal ensues between them.
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Duncan AnalcoDirectorMe Gustas Cuando Callas
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Duncan AnalcoWriter
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Duncan AnalcoProducerOne For My Baby
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Shiloh Tumo WashingtonProducerOne For My Baby
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Xochitl LopezKey Cast"Soni"
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Diego MejoradoKey Cast"Diego"
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Maheen MustainKey Cast"The Woman From Below"
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Mia CucufateKey Cast"The Woman From Below (Voice)"
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Duncan AnalcoEditorsMe Gustas Cuando Callas
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Luke HansCinematographer
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Duncan AnalcoSound Design
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Kayla BrillCostume Design
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Stefhanie ArreguinFirst Assistant Camera
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Corey ClarkSecond Assitant Camera
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Corey ClarkLoader
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Shiloh Tumo WashingtonFirst Assitant Director
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Christian MartinezSecond Assistant Director
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Melanie FlowersStage Technician
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Steve BurhamProduction Assistant
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Yari RodriguezLine Producer
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Olivia RodriguezSet Dresser
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Olivia RodriguezScript Supervisor
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Luke HansColorist
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Grant BohneGaffer
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Nicole KellyComposer
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Will DominiciSound Engineer
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Will DominiciFoley Artist
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Project Type:Experimental, Short
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Genres:Drama, Avantgarde, Surreal, Romance, Foreign
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Runtime:18 minutes 14 seconds
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Completion Date:December 18, 2023
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Production Budget:4,000 USD
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Country of Origin:United States
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Country of Filming:United States
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Language:Spanish
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Shooting Format:16mm
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Aspect Ratio:1:66:1
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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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Digital Cinema Package:Unavailable
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New York Latino Film FestivalNew York City
United States
September 18, 2024
World Premiere
Official Selection -
Midwest Film FestivalChicago
United States
September 30, 2024
Chicago Premiere
Official Selection -
Festival FotogeniaMexico City
Mexico
November 22, 2024
Latin American Premiere
Official Selection -
Latino and Native American Film FestivalNew Haven
United States
October 17, 2024
Connecticut Premiere
Official Selection, Best Short Narrative Film -
Philadelphia Latino Arts & Film FestivalPhiladelphia
United States
June 20, 2025
Philadelphia Premiere
Official Selection -
Cariño Festival de CineChicago, IL
United States
November 15, 2025
Official Selection
Duncan Alessandro Analco is a Mexican-American film director, producer, writer, editor, photographer, and musician from Durham, North Carolina with a BA in filmmaking from Columbia College Chicago. With a concentration in the avant-garde, his films utilize unconventional storytelling methods such as long takes, slow pacing, and the use of non-professional actors. Much of his work is marked by philosophical elements, melancholic explorations of time and memory, and dreamlike visual imagery.
In 2021, he was awarded the Emerging Artists Program grant by the Durham Arts Council for his photography, and has had his films shown in Chicago, Mexico City, New York City, Durham, New Haven, and Philadelphia, among others.
"Symphonie Fantastique" is a dramatization of what I once experienced in real life: an intimate night spent overlooking, participating in, and photographing a wind ensemble performance (down to the exact location we shot it in, too). I was the wind ensemble percussionist who brought my then-lover up with me as the music washed over us while we held each other intimately on that dimly-lit floor. Looking back now, I reminisce on that memory as if I was watching myself in third-person; an omnipotent presence that experienced it all alongside me from an entirely different perspective than my own. That was when I was a senior in high school. Now, I'm a college graduate--coming back to where this film's inspiration began. I have written, directed, produced, and edited my dramatization with my best friends and family by my side and knew that having my Chicago crew drive all the way to Durham, North Carolina would be worth it in order to bring this film to life the exact way it needed to be. The one thing I ensured was vastly different in my new dramatization, however, was the language the characters spoke in and the ages these characters embodied. I chose to change the ages because the way I experienced this moment never felt like I was a teenager when it happened--it always felt like an experience only those fully experienced in the many intricacies of life and love could understand. I chose to make this film in Spanish because I think there's a version of myself that wishes this inciting memory of mine was spoken in my first language...maybe not even in the US as well. Another reason why I wanted to change it was to honor my late Abuela, Soni (of whom the main character is named after) and Diego, the name my parents originally wanted to give me. My main actress' father also passed away last year so I made sure that they are both honored in the credits for they would have been so proud of their child/grandchild making a film that is as inherently as Mexican as they were. That, to me, is something that I believe makes this film special: its proximity to me and my culture onto an otherwise objective, real-life experience. I couldn't be more proud of myself or my cast and crew and together we made our own 16mm staple into Mexican-American cinema that the world has yet to see. This is "Symphonie Fantastique."