Andre Alfa
- Director
- Actor
- Writer
Having grown up on several continents, including Asia and Europe, Andre Alfa moved to the US from France where he has gone on to write and direct several films as well as music videos, commercials, webisodes and custom video content for brands and online media.
Winner of numerous awards, including the Sundance Channel Award for Best Dramatic Short and multiple Best Film awards, he wrote and directed the award-winning underground hits "The Pathos of Distance" and "Broken-Mirror Music," which garnered plenty of acclaim from Charles Bukowski fans.
Alfa made his highly anticipated feature film directorial debut with "Blackstock Boneyard," a fast-paced, grisly horror film based on an untold true story of racial injustice.
A story-first director with a strong and distinct visual aesthetic, his work has been described as "gripping," "thoughtful," "provoking," "visually stunning" and "viscerally intense." With a strong feel for pacing, he is also an actor's advocate who has a deep rapport with the characters and the actors.
He attended Pepperdine University in Malibu, CA and the Los Angeles Film School in Hollywood, CA, where his classmates included Ariel Vromen, Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor.
Winner of numerous awards, including the Sundance Channel Award for Best Dramatic Short and multiple Best Film awards, he wrote and directed the award-winning underground hits "The Pathos of Distance" and "Broken-Mirror Music," which garnered plenty of acclaim from Charles Bukowski fans.
Alfa made his highly anticipated feature film directorial debut with "Blackstock Boneyard," a fast-paced, grisly horror film based on an untold true story of racial injustice.
A story-first director with a strong and distinct visual aesthetic, his work has been described as "gripping," "thoughtful," "provoking," "visually stunning" and "viscerally intense." With a strong feel for pacing, he is also an actor's advocate who has a deep rapport with the characters and the actors.
He attended Pepperdine University in Malibu, CA and the Los Angeles Film School in Hollywood, CA, where his classmates included Ariel Vromen, Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor.