Genre
Synopsis
Crystal loves geography, dancing, squishmallows, and video games. But Crystal was born biologically a different gender than she identifies. Her family and friends all love Crystal and accept her for who she is, but the state of Texas does not. This is the story of a little girl and her beautiful family who are unjustly being torn apart over anti-transgender laws in Texas.
Bio
Mower is an award-winning screenwriter and director who has produced feature films, made-for-television movies, docu-series and commercials for Lifetime/A&E, Amazon, Apple+ and other streaming platforms. Born in the small, East Texas town of Palestine to a Southern Baptist minister and a stay-at-home mom, Mower’s films often focus on female protagonists fighting to break free from societal, religious and/or parental expectations. Her debut feature film THE PREACHER’S DAUGHTER, about a minister’s daughter who has an affair with the music minister of her father’s church, was picked up by Lifetime/A&E where it garnered the highest rating of an original movie on LMN in 2012. This success lead to Mower writing and directing four more movies for Lifetime, most recently WHAT HAPPENED TO MY SISTER? (2022). Mower’s independent feature THE NEVER LIST, about an overachieving teenage girl who’s perfectly planned academic life is derailed after the death of her best friend, was accepted into the AMC Indie program and was released in 112 movie theaters across the U.S. in December, 2020. Mower also produced and co-directed DAYNA STEELE: ROCK THE 36TH, a 2018 Amazon docu-series that followed a former radio DJ’s run for Congress. The series not only gave Mower the opportunity to interview rock and roll legends David Crosby, Joan Jett and Melissa Etheridge, it also led to her producing and directing political ads for Mothers Against Greg Abbott PAC.
Screening History
Dallas International Film Festival SHORTS
Lone Star Film Festival
Cinema Diverse: Palm Springs LGBTQ Film Festival
Topanga Film Festival
Hollywood Queer Short Film Festival
Awards History
Best Short Documentary - DIFF SHORTS
Best Documentary - Hollywood Queer Short Film Festival
Best Short Documentary - Gulf Coast Film and Video Festival