Parity Pipeline

Parity Pipeline

There's No Place like Centron

Directed by Elle Schneider

For four decades, Centron Corporation, based in Lawrence, Kansas, was one of the most prolific film studios in the United States, releasing over 2000 titles, though their legacy today rests not on a 1970 Oscar nomination or a political campaign with sweeping legislative results, but on the shoulders of vintage movie collectors and one cult feature made by in-house staff, Carnival of Souls.

  • ABOUT
  • BIO
  • AWARDS

Genre

Synopsis

For four decades, Centron Corporation, based in Lawrence, Kansas, was one of the most prolific film studios in the United States, releasing over 2000 titles, though their legacy today rests not on a 1970 Oscar nomination or a political campaign with sweeping legislative results, but on the shoulders of vintage movie collectors and one cult feature made by in-house staff, Carnival of Souls.

Through the lens of Centron's story, we delve into the little-discussed history of film in education, and follow the rise and fall of America’s often-disregarded “other” film industry, one that ran parallel to Hollywood but was equally influential to the behavior and social growth of generations of children as any mainstream blockbuster. In a world where facts and history seem more and more up for debate, THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE CENTRON tackles the questions we rarely ask out loud: why are our children taught what they’re taught, and who gets to decide? And in a media landscape where academics, schools, and archives are quietly disposing of "out of date" educational material, how can we preserve this crucial slice of American history before it's gone for good?

Director Identity

Bio

Elle Schneider is a filmmaker from New York City with a love of art in all disciplines and a passion for genre film. Her work as director and cinematographer has been featured in Vanity Fair, The Hollywood Reporter, Rolling Stone, and American Cinematographer, for which she is now a contributing writer. A history lover, who cites Roger Corman, David Lean, Robert Wise, and Ken Russell as her biggest cinema influences, Elle is the foremost expert on 1959 sci-fi melodrama TEENAGERS FROM OUTER SPACE and industrial-educational production studio CENTRON CORPORATION. She shot and directed two seasons of History's acclaimed THE FOOD THAT BUILT AMERICA, and Western NEAR TO SUPERSTITION for Panasonic. 


A director and DP working cross-platform, Elle often selects projects that feature dark or unconventional stories that resonate with her interest in time period, texture, and color. She has directed music videos for Gangstagrass, Mock Sun, Sad13, Isla June, and Speedy Ortiz; the most recent premiered in Fangoria. Shorts have played at festivals like Slamdance, Sidewalk, HollyShorts, and Tallgrass. 


Elle was a 2020 The Future of Film is Female finalist, a 2022 ReFrame Rise Finalist, and 2025 recipient of the inaugural Ashes to Films grant for fire-affected filmmakers; her one-take horror short TRUE CRIME is currently in post. Previously, she was a 2015 Big Vision Empty Wallet fellow for WWII biopic In Search of the Sun, and she is the only two-time recipient of the Marguerite Roberts Award for Feature Screenwriting at USC School of Cinematic Arts. Her in-development docu-series, MOTHER OF ALL EVIL, based on Heidi Honeycutt's I SPIT ON YOUR CELLULOID, the history of women directing horror films, was selected to pitch at the 2025 Sitges Film Festival.


Also in 2025 she was cinematographer on Oscar-shortlisted documentary ALL THE WALLS CAME DOWN and BOORMAN AND THE DEVIL, which premiered at the Venice Biennale.

Awards History

University of Kansas - Visiting Scholar Grant (2022)