About
Homeland Film Co.

We tell stories with intention — grounded in truth, craft, and care for the people behind the work.

Two men operating camera equipment outdoors near a concrete barrier with water and trees in the background during sunset or dusk.

Homeland Film Co. was founded on a simple belief: the most meaningful stories aren’t rushed — they’re earned.

We work with brands, organizations, and individuals who care deeply about what they’re building and how it’s communicated. Whether we’re creating a commercial, a brand film, or a long-form narrative, our focus stays the same — clarity, honesty, and intentional storytelling.

Our process starts with listening. We take time to understand the heart of the story before shaping the approach. That means asking better questions, preparing thoroughly, and being thoughtful about every decision from pre-production through delivery.

We don’t chase trends.
We build work meant to last.

Three men sitting and standing near a black van outdoors with trees in the background. One man is sitting on a small black case, another is sitting on the van's open sliding door with a camera hanging from a strap around his neck, and the third man is sitting on the van's front seat with the door open. Equipment and bags are on the ground beside them.

Alongside our commercial work, we are actively producing long-form documentary projects that explore truth, trauma, and restoration.

Our current feature documentary, Unseen Chains, is in production and scheduled for a theatrical release in 2026. This work sharpens how we think, how we listen, and how we tell stories — and it informs everything we do across the company.

Long-form storytelling keeps us grounded.
It reminds us that real stories deserve patience and care.

A woman standing on a balcony at night, silhouetted against a cityscape with lights, with her reflection visible in a glass wall.

Homeland Film Co. is led by Christian DaCosta, a filmmaker working across commercial and documentary storytelling.

No matter the scale of the project, the approach remains the same: be present, be prepared, and honor the story and the people trusting us to tell it.

If that mindset resonates, we’d love to start a conversation.

A man wearing a black hoodie, black pants, and sneakers, holding a drone remote control, standing on a paved path in a sunlit forest with green trees.