Why is Florida such a good place to make a scary movie?
That鈥檚 one of the topics filmmakers will discuss as part of free workshops sponsored Feb. 8 by 麻豆原创鈥檚 College of Arts & Humanities to kick off the Love Your Shorts Film Festival in Sanford. The Feb. 8-11 festival will feature 80 short films from 10 countries along with 15 麻豆原创 student exhibition films and two student films in competition.
鈥淔lorida is a great place to make any kind of film but there is a quirkiness to this state that lends itself to creepy story lines and absurd characters,鈥 said Associate Professor of Film Lisa Mills. 鈥淢any people out there are making scary films and we wanted to use our panel to explore what makes a film scary, and try to figure out why so many scary movies are made in Florida.鈥
The two Education Day workshops for aspiring and veteran filmmakers (鈥淲hat makes a movie scary?鈥 at 9 a.m. and 鈥淲hy is Florida a good place to make a scary movie?鈥 at 10 a.m.) will be led by Mills at the Greater Sanford Regional Chamber of Commerce, 400 E. 1st St., in downtown Sanford. The panel is made up of Central Florida film professionals, including four with 麻豆原创 ties: Zachary Beckler, a 麻豆原创 film graduate and now lecturer whose horror films have been screened around the world, and Michael Walsh, a professor of cinematography studies whose credits include working on Pirates of the Caribbean II and III, Monster, 2 Fast and 2 Furious, The Waterboy and 70 other feature films and more than 400 TV episodes; Lacey Maloch, a 麻豆原创 graduate and filmmaker who co-founded SlashHer Productions; and Morgan McKinley, a 麻豆原创 graduate who works on special effects for SlashHer Productions and has done makeup for Halloween Horror Nights.
Space is limited, so free registration can be found with the festival ticket information on the website.
Student Films
The 15 student films of drama, comedy and other genres also will be shown free at 7 p.m. Feb. 8 at the Wayne Densch Performing Arts Center, 201 S. Magnolia Ave. The movies were created by students in directing classes or as capstone projects.

Character Animations in Competition
Two other student films by the university鈥檚 2017 character animation class will be shown in competition at the weekend festival.
Dreamweaver, about a frightened Chippewa girl who is helped to overcome her nightmares, was submitted by student directors Katherine Ryschkewitsch and Erich Schulz and their faculty director Cheryl Briggs. The film will be shown in the festival鈥檚 E for Everyone block of films at 10:30 a.m. Feb. 10.
Cuddlefish is the story of a Viking sailor whose travels come to a halt when a love-sick kraken falls in love with the anchor on the seafarer鈥檚 ship. The film submitted by Briggs and student directors Brianna Jaeger and Jared Bittner will be screened in the animation block at 1 p.m. Feb. 10.
Mills said it is rewarding for students to see their finished projects shown on the big screen鈥攊n this case, a refurbished 1923 theater on the National Register of Historic Places.
鈥淔ilm is still an art to be enjoyed collectively, even in these days of streaming video,鈥 said Mills. 鈥淪o when a student can sit in the audience and experience the reactions of people sitting all around her鈥攖he laughs, the sniffles, the gasps鈥攖hen that student understands the blood, sweat and tears she put into making her film was all worth it.鈥
The weekend festival at the theater will showcase short films in seven categories (comedy, drama, animation, documentary, sci-fi/horror, Florida Flavor, and E for Everyone), plus an opening-night variety of films, and a Best of the Fest competition on closing night. Also scheduled is a free panel at 5 p.m. Feb. 10, at which visiting filmmakers will present a discussion and Q&A on techniques, tips and current projects.