From writer and director Jamin Winans (Ink, The Frame), comes one of the more unusual films you’ll see this year, starring Laura Rauch, Anthony Nuccio, Martin Angerbauer, and Ian Hinton. Ella embarks on a whimsical odyssey between life and death, convinced she has received a message from her creator.
Myth of Man is a true work of art, leaning heavily into that as its underlying foundation. It is phantasmagorical in the way that Time Bandits, The Imaginarium of Dr Parnassus, and The City of Lost Children are, but it is as much a lyrical orchestration of visuals as it is a motion picture.

It is also very much an auteur film, and I mean this in the most literal sense possible. The director, writer, composer, cinematographer and editor are all the same person: Jamin Winans. It is extremely extremely rare to see a major release with all these roles filled by a single person.

Winans produced this latest work via his production offices at Double Edge Films in Denver, Colorado. The film has a staggering 288 cast members, and was shot in two filming locations, one in Kentucky, USA, and the other in Budapest, Hungary.
The fact that it is all done without dialog means that it will have international appeal and will have a potential audience in every market.
Director and Producer Jamin & Kiowa Winans sold their house in Colorado to fund the movie’s production. They moved to a family farm in Kentucky and converted a barn into a giant green screen studio.
Much like John Carpenter, Director Jamin Winans composes the music to all his films.
Principal production/shooting of the film took three to four months back in 2021. However, post-production took approximately 3.5 years due to the over 3500 VFX sequences that Jamin and Kiowa Winans had to render by themselves with no studio funding.
Getting this film made took a remarkable kind of courage mostly absent in Hollywood today. You can see Myth of Man on Apple TV, Amazon Prime, YouTube (pay per view), Google Play, and Fandango at Home.
The music-driven story unfolds without a single word of dialogue and makes for an experience you will never forget. This film represents nearly a decade of work by a very small team of passionate artists and we all hope you love it as much as we loved making it.
-Jamin Winans