
August 20, 1966 · 59 years old
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Mark Borchardt (born August 20, 1966) is an American independent filmmaker. He is best known as the subject of the 1999 film American Movie: The Making of Northwestern, which documented two years he spent writing, shooting and editing his horror short, Coven (…

A rogue Multiverse agent goes on a manhunt for alternate versions of himself, getting stronger with each kill. Only the last version of himself, an LASD cop, can stop his crusade before he becomes "The One".

Aspiring filmmaker Mark Borchardt attempts to finance his dream project by finally completing Coven (1997), a micro-budget horror film he abandoned years before.

A high school prom faces a deadly threat: a flesh-eating virus that spreads via a popular brand of bottled water.

A father tries hard to be a good dad but alcoholism is the huge deterrant.

A long-empty farmstead holds secret worlds, accidentally unlocked by an amateur photographer and his wife.

A missing hard drive with hundreds of thousands of dollars in cryptocurrency and the issue of trust in the modern era.