Luna Court: The Movie

In the early 1990s, 18-year-old Denver embarks on a cross-country journey with her best friend, Shae, searching for her missing father. What begins as a quest to find the perfect spot for a vintage store transforms into a soul-searching mission filled with unexpected turns.  

From Los Angeles to Washington D.C., they traverse the country with the windows down and the music turned all the way up. Against a thrilling backdrop of music and the freedom of the open road, Denver grapples with painful truths about her father, her mother's early death, and her own identity.

Telling her incredible true story on the big screen has been central to Dandy’s mission from the very beginning. Mining universal human emotions and cinematic moments, it holds the power to touch the heart as deeply as any Oscar-nominated film.

Determined to make sense of own traumatic experiences, Dandy enrolled in film school and wrote a screenplay about her path of self-discovery. She went on to earn a degree in communications with an emphasis on film at California State University at Fullerton and later studied directing at the Los Angeles Film School. She has worked as a photographer, director, and set designer for various TV pilots and short films and as a set photographer for a number of notable artists, including Sean Lennon and Stevie Nicks.

The film adaptation of Luna Court represents the culmination of her efforts to share her journey with the world and her passion to normalize mental wellness—and make it accessible to as many people as possible.