the films of    Matthw Kyle Levine                    On The Phone                 Caleb & Sarah                 Some Time Soon                 Trusted Hands                 Henry               House To Herself                 Daddy’s Wallet               Miss Freelance                                 ABOUT              
Miss Freelance      ©MMXIX An Our Woods Production




A week in the life of a young woman who freelances for strange men throughout New York City.


Year: 2019
Runtime:  19 minutes
Format: Canon Digital Cinema Camera
Filmed in:  New York City

Written and Directed by                             Matthew Kyle Levine

Producers                                                      
Matthew Kyle Levine, Shea Glasheen, Alex Scarlatos

Starring:                                                        
Maddy Murphy, Timothy J. Cox, Ivan Greene, Zach Abraham, Keith Boratko        
                                       
Cinematography                                          
Matthew Kyle Levine     and     Alex Scarlatos

Sound
Shea Glasheen

Editors                                                          
Matthew Kyle Levine     and     Alex Scarlatos    



   
   
Reviews:


Miss Freelance works in every way. The emotions are high and realistic, the directing keeps things grounded yet intense, and the dialogue and characterizations are fantastic.”

-  Bobby LePire, Film Threat

“MISS FREELANCE ultimately succeeds because it trusts its audience. Levine doesn’t force a message; he crafts a series of interactions that feel authentic enough for viewers to project their own thoughts onto them. That openness, combined with Murphy’s controlled yet vulnerable performance, makes the film resonate longer than many features. It’s a small work in terms of length, but not in its impact.”

- Chris Jones, Overly Honest Reviews


“Matthew Kyle Levine's Miss Freelance is a somber piece of filmmaking about loss souls searching for brief moments of contentment to validate their empty lives. It’s a testament to the complexities of the flawed human psyche and our inability to recognize our own self worth.”

-  Robert James O’Dell, Friday Independent Film Showcase