London Homer-Wambeam
- Director
- Writer
- Editor
London Homer-Wambeam, creator of Petrifying
Productions, has written, directed and produced eight films and is a
two-time special guest at the Steampunk convention, AnomalyCon, in
Denver. He placed 5th in the nation at National History Day 2009, for
his co-performance on the politics of Dr. Seuss. He won 3rd place at
National History Day for his documentary on the Hollywood Production
Code. London won "Best Student Documentary," at the New York
International Independent Film Festival for his short film about
Einstein's theory of relativity during the summer of 2010. London, who
has been home schooled since kindergarten, wrote, directed, and edited
his feature-length Steampunk moving picture, Forewarned, during the
spring and summer of 2010 when he was 14 years old. Forewarned features
a cast of 20 and is billed as being "the best airship pirate,
time-travel, mad scientist, insane asylum movie of the year."
Forewarned premiered at the Wyo movie theatre in Laramie, Wyoming to an
audience of 250 people and was featured at the AnomalyCon Steampunk
convention in March, 2011. London led his FIRST Lego League robotics
programming team to win the Wyoming championship beating out 60 other
teams during the fall of 2010. In 2011, he was a finalist at National
History Day for his documentary on the Hindenburg disaster, and won the
best in state award. It was also an official selection at the SoCal
Film Festival that year. London wrote, directed and edited his feature
film, The Astronomer, a remake of George Méliès' 1902 film Le Voyage
dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon). It debuted at the Wyo Theatre and
was screened at AnomalyCon 2012 and TeslaCon 2012. London created a
short documentary about his discovery of Hindenburg artifacts at a
local archive while working on his last documentary. It was a finalist
in the Wyoming Film Contest 2012. London costarred in his web series
Max & Melvin's Mortuary Madness, which is available free from BlipTV.
In 2014 London released is third full length film, Project Cora, about
an introverted AI software designer falls in love with a girl claiming
to be a robot running his software. Project Cora premiered at the Gryphon Theater and was also screened at the Laramie Film Festival and the University of Wyoming Student Union. His latest projects include a minimalist surrealist web series Telephoria and for the past two years he has been been working on a short film titled King of Nothing. Among his other projects, London hosted a local radio show and podcast from 2009 to 2015.