Students & Associates

Graduate Students

Current and past graduate students associated with and supported by the Stereoscopic 3D Lab

Neil Burns, MFA (Production)

Neil Burns is a Toronto-based filmmaker and artist who has been working in animation for over fifteen years.  He has worked in television, film, and commercials as an animator, designer, and director.  In 2008 he directed Edison and Leo, the first stop-motion feature produced in Canada, based on a script by George Toles.  His work has won awards in festivals around the world.  He graduated from the Emily Carr College of Art, and  he is currently  working on this  MFA thesis project The Trophy  - a short stop motion animation film in S3D

Resat Fuat Cam, PhD candidate (Cinema & Media Studies)

Resat Fuat Cam's research mainly focuses on the interrelations between philosophy, aesthetics and cinema. He currently conducting theoretical research  on stereoscopic film by comparing  early film theory with contemporary philosophy.

Zach Finkelstein, MFA (Production, 2011-14)

Zach Finkelstein became the first MFA student from the Department of Film to produce a film in stereoscopic 3D.