Danielle Gardner
Directing
Known For

A team of Vancouver investigators, led by homicide detective Angie Flynn, sets out to uncover the motive of each puzzling murder by discovering the killer's connection to the victim. Viewers get a glimpse of the killer before and after the crime is committed.
Motive

13 episode series created by PBS to commemorate 100 years of movie-going. The history of Hollywood and filmmaking comes alive in this spectacular celebration of movie magic. It's a mesmerizing, epic analysis that combines rare archival film, key scenes from immortal movies, interviews with leading filmmakers and commentary from noted film scholars and critics. As seen on PBS, this series is the definitive chronicle of the American cinema, from its beginning to today. Includes interviews with Robert Altman, Clint Eastwood, Harrison Ford, Spike Lee, George Lucas, Sidney Lumet, Julia Roberts, Martin Scorsese, Gene Siskel, Steven Spielberg, Oliver Stone, Quentin Tarantino, and many more.
American Cinema
Set on the south side of Chicago, How U Like Me Now? is a comedy that captures the lifestyles of several twenty-something African Americans. Centering on a slacker named Thomas and his ambitious girlfriend Valerie, the film follows the couple as they decide whether to continue their relationship or call it quits.
How U Like Me Now

1939. A rogue Nazi unit—the Panda Syndicate—hunts an ancient artifact of apocalyptic power. They fail. The talisman vanishes. Today, electrician Jim Reeder stumbles into a wiring job for Professor Rachel Gehret. He doesn't know her family has secretly guarded that same artifact for decades. Or that the Syndicate, alive and hunting, has just found them. Now, with hell on earth as the prize, Reeder and his friends must solve a decades-old mystery and fight a shadow war against a sorcerer's legion. The phony war is over. The real one begins. A dark comic-adventure from Crazy Elk Productions.
Fight the Panda Syndicate

On September 11, 2001, Cantor Fitzgerald became famous for the worst of all possible reasons. 658 of their employees were missing, presumed dead, in the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. Though Cantor suffered almost twice the casualties of the FDNY, their story was soon pushed aside as the media ambushed Cantor CEO Howard Lutnick, who went from face-of-the-tragedy to pariah within weeks. A true stranger-than-fiction account, unfolding over months and years, the film captures being caught in the crosshairs of history.
Out Of The Clear Blue Sky

"Soul In The Hole" is a documentary depicting the lives and struggles of a team of street-basket players aspiring to win the prestigous tournament which the movie's named after while at the same time balancing their personal issues and problems.