“Our Son” Limited Theatrical Release, “Runs in the Family
Amanda Mustard Has Now Evolved Into a Filmmaker From what we can tell, Amanda is still a professional photojournalist, bringing a myriad of remarkable stories into the limelight in a unique manner while also holding onto her new title of filmmaker. However, when growing stress and anxiety leads to divorce, each man finds himself fighting for custody of their young son. Head to Netflix to stream it now!
Amanda Mustard
Amanda Mustard is a queer filmmaker and photojournalist raised on a Christmas tree farm in rural Pennsylvania. She began her career as a photojournalist during the Arab Spring In Egypt, and spent a decade working regularly for clients like the New York Times and National Geographic first in the Middle East, and then in Thailand covering. Although born and raised on an aesthetically wondrous Christmas tree farm in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Amanda was honestly quite young when she understood her family was far from idyllic. They did appear so at one point, yet the truth is they were the epitome of brokenness — her grandfather was a serious pedophile, even family members were victims, and still none of them spoke up.
Amandamustard • Instagram photos and videos
Amanda Mustard is a queer filmmaker and award-winning photojournalist raised on a Christmas tree farm in rural Pennsylvania. As a professional people watcher, her practice is rooted in a deep empathy, curiosity, and love for the messiness of being alive. She details how he was first charged with statutory rape of a year-old girl in while working as a chiropractor in Bradford, yet only received probation and was able to carry on with his career near Harrisburg, where the abuse continued. In putting those skeletons on display, Mustard resisted portraying her now-deceased grandfather the way so many people view pedophiles: as monsters.
Amanda Mustard
Amanda Mustard is a Brooklyn-based queer filmmaker and photojournalist raised on a Christmas tree farm in rural Pennsylvania. She began her career as a photojournalist during the Arab Spring In Egypt, and spent a decade working regularly for clients like the New York Times and National Geographic first in the Middle East, and then in Thailand. For SSP Africa Join or Sign In to view full member profiles.
How Amanda Mustard Confronted More Than Her Pedophile
How Amanda Mustard Confronted More Than Her Pedophile Grandfather in ‘Great Photo, Lovely Life’ “I made this thing to be this Rorschach test for people,” Mustard told Jezebel of her HBO. Every family has its own lore. Unfortunately, for others, the stories are more sinister and require the kind of scrutiny their elders are either ill-equipped or unwilling to account for.
The Video Consortium
Filmmaker Confronts Sex Abuser Grandfather in HBO Documentary, Exposing Painful Family History (Exclusive) Photojournalist Amanda Mustard tells PEOPLE she made the film for "survivors who have. . 'Great Photo, Lovely Life'
4.) Queer photojournalist and filmmaker Amanda Mustard turns the investigative lens on her own family in Great Photo, Lovely Life, a stirring documentary that is now available to stream on Max. . Amanda Mustard
Amanda Mustard is a queer filmmaker and photojournalist raised on a Christmas tree farm in rural Pennsylvania. As a professional people watcher, her practice is rooted in a deep empathy, curiosity, and love for the messiness of being alive. .