Action.
It’s the word we most often associate with movies — big spectacle, big movement, big moments.
But some of the most powerful films move differently. Not through explosions or chase scenes, but through emotional tension. Through interior conflict. Through the quiet shifts that change a life.
CHARLIEBIRD is one of those films.
Winner of the Founders Award for Best U.S. Narrative Feature at the 2025 Tribeca Film Festival — and the recipient of the festival’s Best Performance award — CHARLIEBIRDannounces a striking new voice in American independent cinema.
In her feature directorial debut, Libby Ewing crafts an intimate, deeply human character drama from a screenplay by Samantha Smart, who also stars in the film. Set within a pediatric hospital ward, the story follows the evolving relationship between a music therapist and her teenage patient — two souls navigating grief, uncertainty, and the fragile work of healing.
That teenage patient, portrayed by newcomer Gabriela Ochoa Perez, delivers a breakout performance — raw, grounded, and unforgettable — earning her Tribeca’s top acting honor.
In this episode of INSIDE THE ARTHOUSE, we sit down with Libby Ewing to talk about bringing this quiet, powerful story from script to screen — and what it means for an intimate indie film to break through on one of cinema’s biggest festival stages.
Our conversation about CHARLIEBIRD starts now.