The Quantum Shorts film festival is delighted to announce its three top prize winners, selected from a shortlist of ten incredible short films inspired by quantum physics. The Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC), is a scientific partner of the festival.
The shortlist was created from over 170 submissions from all over the world. 鈥淚t's wonderful to see so many people being inspired by the seemingly esoteric scientific concepts from quantum physics and finding creative ways to make them relevant to human stories,鈥 says physicist and author Brian Greene at Columbia University, a member of the judging panel and founder of the World Science Festival.
Each winning team gets a cash award and engraved trophy, on top of the screening fee, certificate and one-year digital subscription to Scientific American awarded to all finalists.
A detective, a serial killer and a parallel universe provide the framework for the film that takes first prize: director Thomas Tay Li Guo鈥檚 quantum thriller Slide! Tay, an undergraduate student in materials science in Singapore, has a diploma in screenwriting.

鈥淚 am a strong believer that arts and science coincide on many areas and Quantum Shorts did a fantastic job on proving that,鈥 says Tay, who made the film with co-producer Lin Tianyun and two actors.
Honor Harger, Executive Director for ArtScience Museum at Marina Bay Sands, Singapore, praised the film for its 鈥渇antastic script鈥 and 鈥渆xcellent production鈥. Eliene Augenbraun, Multimedia Managing Editor for Nature Research Group, said the short 鈥渋s so good I鈥檇 like to see a longer film鈥. The team receives $1500 for their work.
Together, the judges bring wide expertise in physics, film and arts. Also on the panel are Alex Winter, actor and director, Artur Ekert, Director of the Centre for Quantum Technologies in Singapore, and Jamie Lochhead, who wrote and directed the 2019 documentary 鈥楨instein's Quantum Riddle鈥 about quantum entanglement for NOVA, the award-winning U.S. Public Broadcasting Service's flagship science program.
The runner up prize of $1000 goes to If the World Spinned Backwards by Leonardo Martinelli and co-writer Arthur Valverde, a poetic imagination of how quantum theory鈥檚 independence of time would change the human experience.

Martinelli, a Brazilian filmmaker, said that participating in Quantum Shorts was a unique opportunity. 鈥淭he festival has an extremely original proposal and format. Even having participated in many festivals, I have never seen something like it. It's an honor to be a part of it,鈥 he said.
Decided by online public vote on the shortlist, the People鈥檚 Choice Prize of $500 goes to Legio VIII Quantae: The quantum resurgence after the fall of Silicon Valley. PhD student Andrea Rodriguez Blanco gathered a cast of friends and family to film this faux documentary in the Spanish town of Leon, imagining its future as a quantum city. This film was also the favourite of judges Ekert and Winter.

All the finalists are being screened around the world. Quantum Shorts events have so far taken place in Canada, New Zealand and Singapore, with the next screenings happening 16 April in Sydney and 29 April in Brisbane, Australia, and then in cities across the UK during June. The short films can also be watched online.
They come with high endorsements. Winter, who recently announced a return to a famous comedy sci-fi franchise from his earlier career 鈥 to star with Keanu Reeves in Bill & Ted 3: Face the Music - said 鈥淚 really enjoyed all the shorts. Each film was clever and inventive, and together they illustrate how inspiring and varied quantum science can be for story tellers.鈥
Quantum Shorts is organised by the Centre for Quantum Technologies in Singapore with support from media partners Scientific American and Nature, scientific partners and screening partners. It has run every year since 2012, alternating between calls for short films and flash fiction.
Learn more and watch the films at .