The time loop formula gets a psychological thriller twist with Jagged Mind. Brace yourself as the manager of an art gallery experiences blackouts and horrifying visions after dating a mysterious new woman. Little does she know, her new partner may not be as loving as she initially thought.

Starring Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Shannon Woodward, Rosaline Elbay, Kate Szekely, Jimmy Jean-Louis, Benjamin Valenzuela, Brandi Huzzi, and Loren Swan, Jagged Mind offers a fresh take on the time loop story and voodoo. Packed with twists, this psychological thriller keeps audiences guessing while providing insightful commentary and cultural representation.

In anticipation of the movie’s premiere, FilmmakerFocus had an exclusive interview with director Kelley Kali. She shares her thoughts on Jagged Mind, her initial doubts about getting the job, and the changes she made to the original short film.

Kelley Kali on Jagged Mind


FilmmakerFocus: I watched Jagged Mind last night, and it was great. It was tense, it was stylish. What about Allison’s short film and the story really sparked your interest to want to get in the director’s chair for it?

Kelley Kali: Thank you for taking the time to watch it. So, my other feature, I’m Fine (Thanks For Asking) had won at South by Southwest, and that got the attention of 20th Digital. I was able to come in and pitch for the feature version of what was once called First Date, so I didn’t watch the short, I didn’t want to because I didn’t want it to affect how I saw the feature being. Grant, I didn’t think I was gonna get the job [chuckles], because I went in there changing everything. First, it took place in New York, in Manhattan, and it was a Manhattan art gallery.

We know what’s in the Manhattan art galleries, it’s a whole bunch of white art, like, we’ve seen it, we’ve seen it. We might not have seen the two girls before, but we’ve seen [the rest], it wasn’t new to me. Then, the script read as two white women, so I had said, “Well, what if we made the lead African-American, Afro-Caribbean or something?” Mainly also pulling on my background, because I come from an interracial family, and what I liked about that was that I remember my parents going out, walking around, and no one was aggressive towards them. But you would definitely get those looks like, “Oh, they’re together? Okay”.

So, that added this layer of tension to the couple in the story, amongst all the other drama that they have. What I didn’t know is that it was an interracial couple in the short, so me and Allyson were already on the same page. Then, the other thing that I came with was I didn’t think it should take place in New York. I was like, “Look, there’s magic in this movie, we should place it in a place that believes in magic, to make it feel grounded, to make it feel like maybe this can happen, maybe someone can time loop somebody.” So I said, “Let’s put it in New Orleans,” and the team loved it, so I got the job.