Jason Noto
Writing
Known For

Three young people drive to Mexico to scatter their friend's ashes, they are forced to confront their own sense of family, identity and future.
El Camino

When a soldier's son reveals damning information about a local gangster's missing daughter, a war of attrition wreaks havoc on their forgotten coal mining town.
Beyond the Night

Family man Max Bornstein was a full-time dope fiend working within the underground, highly illegal pornography industry in 1968’s New York City. While running books and films to delivery points and mob headquarters around the east coast, Max had the Feds on his tail. But even in the wake of a federal investigation, his truest worry was his wife and two young children, a family kept in the dark about his dealings and the walls of it caving in around him. As he battles his consuming addiction, dissolving family unit and the growing suspicion about his drug use amongst his associates, Max watches helplessly as his well-crafted reality falls to pieces, leaving him searching for the spaces in between.
Addiction: A 60's Love Story

It’s the middle of the 17th Century and a brother and sister are hiding in the garden of an isolated cottage in rural New England. When they enter the house and investigate the kitchen, they gorge themselves on the tempting cakes covering the table. It seems to good to be true.
Butcher's Hill

When a group of young campers wander into the backwoods of upstate New York to see if Cappy's Cabin--a place they think exists only in urban legend--is real, they find themselves in a twisted game of predator and prey as night begins to fall. All they have to do is survive until dawn, but Cappy is very, very real, and night has only just begun...
The Woods Have Eyes

After a boy is confronted with death for the first time, he turns to his imagination for protection and understanding.
La Ricetta
Driven to the edge of insanity by a rat infestation in her apartment, a young woman seeks revenge against the man who exploited her.
Infestation
A biopic of Jim Marshall, dubbed the “godfather of rock ‘n’ roll photography”.