Parity Pipeline

Parity Pipeline

Reproduction

Directed by Kymberly Harris

In a world of art and ambition, Miles, a working class sculptor, and Meryl, the enigmatic Dean of the art school confront the challenges of societal boundaries and the pursuit of personal truth.

  • ABOUT
  • BIO
  • GALLERY

Genre

Synopsis

Miles is a 23 year old kid from a broken working class family, brought up by his single alcoholic father. We meet Miles on campus of a college he could never afford, where his innate gifts as a sculptor gained him a scholarship. Mysteriously, he pulls around his homemade clay in a red wagon and bumps into a rich white girl, Chloe, whose family is powerful at Google and led her interests in multi media art and hacking. These opposites attract and their curiosity keeps them together. Miles is obsessed with creating his senior thesis piece Reproduction, which is a woman pregnant with a man pregnant with a baby. He has been out nights in the rain, digging mud out of the ground, to finish in time to present for his thesis project. There’s an unspoken thing about this sculpture- when you look at it, the baby seems to move. He wheels it into his professor Ricky’s class. Ricky is a bitter previous winner of the coveted art prize at this university, and now teaching, and seems to have it out for Miles. Perhaps because his work is created from raw talent, something Ricky doesn’t have, perhaps because Ricky prefers the young pretty female students better. Although Miles’ sculpture is moving to all in the room, Ricky fails him and tells him to try harder. Chloe offers to hack the system and change the grade. She also suggests that Miles go talk to the Dean Meryl Yardley, a renowned photographer turned administrator. Chloe advises that he must reach his goal of showing at the end of the year Gallery show they’ve all been working towards, and that Ricky’s pass or fail may not effect that but she should change the grade just in case. That night they go dancing at a club where Chloe creates a light show, and fall into bed together in Chloe’s dorm room. In the morning, Chloe shows Miles she has changed the grade. Miles makes an appointment to see Dean Yardley. When he walks into her office, he feels at home amongst the carefully placed orchids and the art on the walls. There is a strange connection, that leads Yardley to Miles’ campus studio to learn how he makes his own clay and to see Reproduction. Impressed, she offers to bring him to her best friend Toni Romio’s house, a talented trans artist who has had enormous international success with her provocative sculptures. Yardley gives Miles a chance to defend his sculpture to her. In their interactions, Miles overhears Yardley confesses she can’t find good models for her latest work, and Miles offers to model for her. One night in a moment of creative despair, Yardley takes him up on it. They begin an affair, Miles gets into the Gallery show, and he feels supported for the first time in his life. Chloe, at the trickiest of times, finds out she is pregnant, and decides to keep the baby as a kind of creative experiment. Miles isconfused, and memories of his dad’s abuse of his mom, his mom’s suicide, and questions about what he is responsible for, class, gender, and fate, all begin to collide, as it seems his sculpture'Reproduction' has taken on a life of its own.

Bio

Kymberly Harris - Director / Writer / Filmmaker


Kymberly Harris is an accomplished director, writer, and the founder of Firsthand Films. With a robust educational background, she holds an MFA in Acting and Playwriting from the Actors Studio, an MA in Theatre from Illinois State University, and a BA in French from Knox College. ​Harris has directed numerous acclaimed theatre productions, including "The Effect" by Lucy Prebble, "Fool for Love" by Sam Shepard, and "Seminar" by Teresa Rebeck, among others. Her work in film is equally distinguished, with notable projects such as "I Heard Sarah," which won the Robert Rodriguez Award and is distributed by Good Deed Entertainment, and "Now and Never," which received the Rising Star Award at Paramount Pictures CineGearExpoLA 2023, and several awards for her feature screenplay “The Man Inside. ​ As the founder of TheatresCool, she directed contemporary and original plays, supported by grants from the Illinois Arts Council and other prestigious organizations. ​ Her previous venture, Fresh Bread Productions, saw her producing plays in NYC at renowned venues like The Public Theatre and Cherry Lane Theatre. ​Harris is praised for her deep understanding of character psychology and her ability to facilitate truthful, character-driven performances. ​ Esteemed figures such as Al Pacino and Laverne Cox have lauded her innovative and passionate approach to storytelling. ​Harris teaches film at Loyola Marymount University.


For inquiries, Kymberly Harris can be contacted at:

 

310.895.8404

[email protected]

https://www.kymberlyharris.me/