

Produced Films


Gigi, an atheist teenager (Kate Larson), is forced to move from California to Minnesota with her mother (Candace Kirkpatrick) to help take care of her aging Grandfather (Jeff Allen) when his life spirals out of control after Grandma's death. Gigi is miserable and desperately wants to get back to California. She comes up with a plan when she meets seven old ladies: if she can get one of them to marry Grandpa, they can take care of Grandpa and she can move back. Plans are thwarted when she discovers that none of them are interested in him because he is not a man of faith. So now the plan is - convert Grandpa to Christianity, get one of the old ladies to marry Grandpa, then back to California. How hard could that be?



Sean (Caleb Milby) has always been the perfect "boy next door" -- a good Christian, hard worker, funny, honest and responsible but that's all about to change. Sean likes Melissa (Rachel Cameron) but doesn't think she's interested. For one, while she drives a luxury sportscar, he doesn't have a car at all. He'll stop at nothing to change that -- including breaking a commandment when he happens upon a winning lottery ticket. Sean realizes that this ticket could change his life and it does, just not in the ways he imagined.
A fresh romantic comedy, Treasure Lies will take you back to the rollercoaster of your younger years -- with all of the suspense, surprise, miscalculation, humiliation, and wonder that can bring.


A father and daughter who have been estranged by divorce for twelve years find themselves on a trip across the country that becomes a more complicated journey than they imagined. It's a story of pain, hope, healing, and redemption.



Jake Larson (B. Bradenton Harper) is thirteen when his whole world is turned upside-down: He loves everything about his life in Chicago. That life changes dramatically when his parents (David Harper and Jana Lensing) decide to move the family away from city violence to a campground in rural Minnesota. To the rebellious young Jake, Minnesota seems like little more than loneliness, chores, and mosquitoes … until he meets Peter (Blade Yocum) -- the boy across the river -- and his dad (Dariush Moslemi). The two form a fast friendship that God uses to transform Jake's life in ways that Jake could never have imagined.