Director’s Vision
I want The Third Moon to feel immersive, atmospheric, and quietly unsettling — something that pulls you in before you fully understand what’s happening.
The film begins grounded in reality, following a familiar situation: a group of friends on their way to a desert music festival. But as the journey unfolds, that sense of normalcy starts to fracture. Subtle shifts turn into something more disorienting, until reality itself becomes unreliable.
Visually, I’m drawn to minimalism and contrast — wide, open spaces that feel both beautiful and isolating. The desert becomes more than a setting; it becomes a presence. Stillness, silence, and scale are used to create tension, allowing the unknown to slowly take over.
At its core, this film explores perception, control, and the moment you realize you’re no longer in charge of your own experience.
The goal is not just to tell a story, but to create a feeling — something that stays with you even after it ends.