Local filmmakers to debut short film
October 9, 2025
By Shanna Grote
The Belton Journal
Two local women who grew up creating movies on their parents’ camcorders are now filmmakers with an exciting new film premiering publicly on YouTube on October 29, at 7:30 p.m. CT.
The first film product under their company, the four-minute short film titled “Dinner with the Joneses”, just received multiple festival selections and a nomination at Austin Horror Film Fest for Best Comedy Short Film.
Written by Diamond Monique Washington, “Dinner with the Joneses” is about a 1950s family, seemingly perfect on the outside, who normalizes a bizarre tradition. Social commentary is served with a dark and macabre twist. The film can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/@CarvedOutEntertainment after its release date.
Danielle Schenzel and Christina Cooper are a creative dynamic duo. They moved to the area after Covid and launched their LLC in 2024, choosing the name Carved Out Entertainment.
“Carved Out” means to create or achieve something through significant effort, such as carving out a career or niche.
“The vision for the company is to create our own space in the film industry, where we produce our own projects and tell the stories we want to tell,” Cooper explained.
“We’re excited to bring more arts and entertainment to the local community in Temple,” Schenzel said.
A film is certainly not produced overnight and this backstory begins in 2012. When Cooper was in college at Arizona State University, she met another aspiring filmmaker and horror writer, Diamond Monique Washington.
Washington offered to write three scripts for Cooper to produce. Christina produced and directed the first two, A Deadly Love (2016) and My Keeper (2018), with next to a zero-dollar budget. Dinner with the Joneses is the 3rd script.
At first there was an effort to raise money for the short film through local sponsorships, and Cooper even designed 1950s magnets to sell and raise funds for the film. Ultimately, Cooper decided that she did not want to wait around for permission or money and needed to move forward without excuses and make this happen. Dinner with the Joneses is selffunded and was made on a much larger budget this time, though still considered a microbudget.
The women held a virtual casting call drawing most their cast and crew from the internet. They used Facebook groups like Austin Filmmakers to spread the word.
“When the actors came on board, that’s when things started to feel real,” Cooper said.
Like most things in life, the film was not without its challenges. The film was originally planned to be shot in Temple but one month before the shoot, the location fell through. The filmmakers did not lose heart and found a perfect Airbnb in Austin instead. This film is a period piece so the location and wardrobe are extremely important to the story. The daunting task of finding the wardrobe was drastically improved with the help of the Violet Crown Company in Bastrop, and Nichole Hull, the costume designer.
Director of Photography Blake Mendoza and his team streamlined the shot list and kept the production running smoothly in the single-day photo shoot. Gaffer Ryan Flores arrived early to black out windows for the perfect dinnertime look, while Key Grip Derrick Dixon and 1st AC Dylan Byrne delivered excellent work.
With Texas labor laws limiting child actors to eight hours on set, each scene had to be completed in about 20 minutes. By the end of the day, three key shots remained with only 1.5 hours left, but the crew pulled it off and the child actors wrapped 10 minutes early.
Hair and Makeup Artist, Angel J. Chumbley, was discovered during a retro photoshoot at LoneStar Pinup in Temple, TX. She brought on assistant Elizabeth McIleheran, and together, their work transformed the actors creating a clear contrast between the characters and the rest of the crew once the costumes and styling were complete.
An original score was created by Alicia Sutedja and Joshua Datant.
“This is my first time working with composers on an original score, and it was one of my favorite parts of this process. Josh and Alicia are amazingly talented and creative artists,” stated Cooper. I’m so grateful for all of the talented people who found the project, and I’m proud of what we created together.”









