The Academy Award-nominated, Emmy-winning filmmaker was in the midst of shoot-outs, meth labs and torture chambers when he shot "Cartel Land," his earlier film which centered on vigilante groups fighting Mexican drug cartels. Now, with "City of Ghosts," which premieres at the Greenwich International Film Festival (GIFF) on June 4, he follows a handful of citizen journalists who banded together after the 2014 ISIS takeover. The group is known as "Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently."
Heineman said he's been in scary situations he could never have imagined when he was growing up in Connecticut but that showcasing powerful stories -- and exposing certain truths -- are paramount to his being.
"My parents brought me up to question the world," he said. "Which I'm forever grateful for."
He studied history at Dartmouth and initially wanted to be a teacher but after being rejected by Teach for America, he found his path in filmmaking, in particular, documentaries.
Next up, his first feature, titled "A Private War" which tells the story of War Correspondent, Marie Colvin, an American journalist who died covering the siege of Homs in Syria.
First, though, there's "City of Ghosts," which Heineman is excited to show a hometown audience. The movie premieres Sunday at 6 p.m. Go to www.greenwichfilm.org/ for information and tickets.
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