ABOUT
PROJECT BLACK TAPE is a film studio creating narrative work rooted in presence, healing, and emotional truth. The studio’s films explore identity, social memory, and the quiet forces that shape who we become.
Founded by filmmaker Rah Robinson, Project Black Tape approaches storytelling as a reflective practice—one that values stillness, rhythm, and emotional honesty over spectacle. The work centers the overlooked, the in-between, and the beautifully complex, allowing space for silence as much as sound.
Our stories are shaped with intention. We believe films can function as containers—for memory, for care, for transformation. Rather than rushing toward resolution, we sit with moments long enough for meaning to emerge.
We don’t rush the story.
We breathe through the cuts.
We listen more than we frame.
At PROJECT BLACK TAPE, storytelling is both craft and care. We hold space for nuanced lived experiences that don’t need to shout to be heard. The work is grounded, human, and attentive—guided by the belief that presence itself can be an act of resistance.
This studio exists to honor those truths—and to offer new ones.
- PBT
