About
Founded in 2015, Cinema Scape Studios is an Award Winning, vastly growing independant
Production Company who strives to produce quality films on a shoe string budget , Producing f
films such as "the Audition" "Company" and the 2016 feature horror film North Woods Starring
Spiderman Homecoming's Jacob Batalon. Currently operating with grade A Film, Sound and
Lighting equipment we are telling stories and making filmmakers voices heard, Collaborators
include: Camron Gran (The Fly Away Girl), Sarah Jones Dittmeier (Unfinished
Business) Sophie Max (CALLIE) and many more!
Founder/Executive Producer
Anthony Raus
Anthony Raus is an Italian American Actor/Producer/Filmmaker/Author and Teacher, born in New York to Georgina and Alphonso Raus, he was first introduced to acting when he was enrolled in a weekend acting camp at the New York Theater Institute. He spent alot of time growing up doing live theater, favorite credits include Shrek (Upstate NY Premiere), Annie, Seussical, A Christmas Carol (tour), Peter Pan, Chicago, Into the Woods, the Wizard of Oz and Legally Blonde. In 2014, he made the jump to film acting when he began studying acting for film and TV at the New York Conservatory for Dramatic Arts in New York City. Growing up Anthony went to the movies frequently. he saw Peter Jackson's King Kong on the big screen and remembers "going nuts". it was incredible, Anthony is probably best known for his horror shorts including 'You Better Watch Out' (Writer/Director), Company (Writer/Director), The Audition (Writer/Director) and for his feature length Horror Comedy film 'North Woods' (Writer/Director). he has thought himself very lucky, having been able to work with so many amazing artists over the years, producing films with Jacob Batalon (Spiderman Homecoming) and Bill Oberst Jr. (Scream Queens, Criminal Minds). He is the founder and chief artistic director at Cinema Scape Studios and has been making films ever since he was a kid, making videos with his parents VHS camera (Shhh Don't tell them).
“I think that 50 percent of the narrative is in the audio/visual storytelling. I happened to think the screenplay is the basis of it all, but definitely doesn't tell the movie. It tells the story, but doesn't tell the whole movie. A lot of the narrative is in the details.”
– Guillermo Del Toro