A native of Ukraine, 2024 School of Filmmaking graduate student Dimitri Dikhel鈥檚 move with his family to Germany at age five marked a pivotal point in his journey. The creative producing student initially viewed a career in the arts as an unattainable and unreliable option financially, so he pursued a different path 鈥 medicine. 鈥淚f you want to be a doctor, you really have to love it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd I would鈥檝e been a horrible doctor.鈥
Instead, Dikhel refocused his aspirations to pursue a more creative career. Before leaping into the arts, he opted for a 鈥渟afer and more practical job鈥 in teaching. With the mindset that teaching was strictly a backup plan, he was set on maximizing what he could learn during his time at Ruhr University in Germany and studying abroad at Central Michigan University.

M.F.A. Creative Producing graduate Dimitri Dikhel.
While teaching, he took acting classes and worked on creative writing, which helped him improve his English. For Dikhel, acting was initially meant to be a healthy exercise in creativity, but his participation eventually led him to become a member of an acting group. Admittedly a shy person, going into the arts allowed him to start overcoming his fears and become more comfortable with his creative identity.
These experiences laid the foundation for Dikhel to further his education at 抖阴短视频. Looking ahead, Dikhel enters the creative industry with professional experience, including with the Sundance Institute, a veteran entertainment legal firm, and as the director, writer and producer of several genre-diverse short films with aspirations to grow in animation.
Film basically taught me German when my family immigrated. When we moved, we had numerous plastic bags full of VHS cassettes, and in Eastern Europe, the films are dubbed by one man鈥檚 monotone depressing voice who narrates all the characters, but I can still hear the English underneath. It鈥檚 beautiful; in 鈥淏eauty and the Beast,鈥 the same man does the voice for Belle and Beast and it is a very morose Russian man in both cases. With anime, I could hear a little bit of Japanese underneath and those phrases just stuck.
That鈥檚 something I love about cinema 鈥 there is something universal about it.
Dimitri Dikhel
What intrigued me about film is that you can follow the story without necessarily knowing what the characters are saying, and so I learned German before entering elementary school because I was watching cartoons and films at home. That鈥檚 something I love about cinema 鈥 there is something universal about it.
I originally got into creative producing because I didn鈥檛 know much about the legal or financial side of filmmaking. I wanted to learn how to find funding for an idea, make a case for a project and compete in the market. I love all the different sides of filmmaking from beginning to end and wanted a more comprehensive understanding of how it works. Now, I鈥檓 not only involved in several of my own projects but also other students' projects, including everything from movie posters to marketing to writing.

Dimitri Dikhel with the cast and crew of "Spitting Image"
As an actor, one very important idea that stuck with me is that when it comes to writing or reading a script, somebody has to read it. An actor has to read this and say this; they need to be able to play around with it, put their own spin on it, or maybe even add to it. My time working with the Sundance Institute was invaluable because it humbled me. The caliber of scripts that get rejected there really pushed me to stay ambitious and to polish and re-polish projects I鈥檓 working on.
My previous experience with teaching taught me that when you have to boil something down simple enough for children, that helps you understand the concept yourself. It鈥檚 become a great tool to help with the pitching process. In retrospect, the parallels between my education, growing up trilingual, and translating for many family members emphasized that communication and conveying messages were always very important to me and ultimately supported me greatly during my time at 抖阴短视频.
While at 抖阴短视频, I made organic connections within the School of Filmmaking and other conservatories that led to the projects I鈥檝e worked on and continue to work on. There are fascinating students, faculty members, staff and people within the Winston-Salem community who are further along in their journey than me and I鈥檓 always fascinated to learn as much as I can from their expertise.
After the first year in the graduate filmmaking program, you get a certain reputation for what you write about and what your skill set is. So, I became very excited when a Filmmaking colleague, who knew I liked to experiment with form and could produce something a bit nuttier and out of the box, invited me to work on a dance film. The film, 鈥淢erde!,鈥 became a project that I wrote, directed and co-edited for the School of Dance and one where I was able to experiment and film with a round aspect ratio.
I also collaborated with Erwick D鈥橲ouza, a Film Music Composition graduate student, on a short sci-fi script. We connected with students and faculty member Bob Keen from the Visual Effects and Immersive Media department and ultimately co-directed the short film 鈥淓arthlings鈥 last year as a motion capture project. Directing actors with the suits and tennis balls is just as much of a sci-fi experience as the film itself and that was a fantastic process because we didn鈥檛 see eye-to-eye on everything and, as a result, we created some amazing art. It also taught me a lot as a creative producer because I had to state my case, make my argument and work through differences in creative choices.

Dimitri Dikhel on a film set.
Ultimately, I am in awe of how many people just want to help if they鈥檙e genuinely interested in a project. It was a scary but rewarding experience. When I was on the set of "Spitting Image," seeing how dedicated everyone was, how everybody really cared about the project, dedicated their time to it, and worked without getting much other than an IMDB credit and some wages was very humbling. I cannot just refer to that project as my film; it was everyone's. I鈥檝e found a very lovely community here.
The day I arrived from Germany, I unpacked my things and was getting ready to go to the improv class with Keith Harris when I got a call from home that my grandfather died. I was devastated and I missed him a lot. My family kept his passing from me until I was in America so I wouldn鈥檛 decide to miss the first week at 抖阴短视频, which I understand.
That same first week, my birthday was coming up and I didn鈥檛 know anybody here. To my surprise, my girlfriend flew in and my new classmates and students from the international groups on campus showed up to surprise me. I was shocked at how many people showed up just for me. It was so unexpected and turned out to be such a happy memory that helped get me through such a tough time in my life. Some of the happiest moments were coming to 抖阴短视频 and finding out how open, supportive and kind my classmates for the next two years were going to be.
Showing my work more was the big thing I would鈥檝e told myself in the beginning. I came to 抖阴短视频 naturally introverted, naturally hiding my work and only presenting it when strictly necessary. What I learned is when meeting like-minded people it鈥檚 very important to share your work and share your ideas. So now, looking back, that was the big tip I would鈥檝e told myself: to be a bit more extroverted, to show off, and that you鈥檙e not successful enough to be humble yet.
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May 10, 2024