Jacob Viness
- Writer
- Editor
- Director
Jacob Viness took an interest in movies at a very early age, citing
going to the theater to see
The Lion King (1994) as one of his
first memories. Growing up, he went to the theater whenever he could.
In high school, he began to learn the craft of film making in his video
productions class. This is where Viness began working with his frequent
collaborator Justin McEver. Also in high
school, he got a job at the local movie theater where he further
studied films and what films the audiences seemed to enjoy. It was
there where he met his frequent Director of
Photography,Joey Kopanski. Viness, McEver,
and Kopanski put together a crew of friends and started making short
films for fun and for experience. Viness wrote and directed each film
they made. Viness soon began writing scripts constantly and studying
many of the technical aspects of film making on his own through books
and the web, while also attending Georgia State University's film
school and later a local technical college. In 2013, Jacob Viness wrote
and directed
Sexual Dysfunction (2013) a
character drama that focused on sexual addiction, religious guilt and
redemption. The film received and honorable mention at North Carolina's
SkyFest in November of 2013. Also in November of 2013, the film won The
People's Choice Award for best film at the Athens VHS Festival. Off the
attention of
Sexual Dysfunction (2013),
Viness began working on multiple projects in 2014. He wrote and
directed a short noir drama film, The Hit, a story focused on a
business meeting between a hitman and his client. The film focuses on
similar themes to Sexual Dysfunction, including religious guilt, and
innate evil in man. He also wrote and directed Rear View Mirror, a dark
comedy about a hitman and his client who accidently kill the wrong guy
and must clean up their mistake. The film screened locally at Get
Connected in Atlanta, GA to strong reviews. Also in 2014, Viness wrote
and directed Pool Party, a Richard Linklater-esque short film that
intervenes in many conversations at a pool party, channeling lost
Generation X tropes, all in one long fifteen minute take. Viness's
films often have longer takes, dolly shots, whip pans, long dialogue
scenes, crime elements and religious themes. He cites Paul Thomas
Anderson, Martin Scorsese, Quentin Tarantino, Steven Spielberg and
Richard Linklater as some of his biggest influences.