During the 1990s, Spione wrote and directed several other notable dramatic shorts, including
Garden (1994), which starred fellow SUNY alumni
Melissa Leo and
Matt Malloy. An eerie period drama about a disturbed father's homecoming,
Garden was featured in the Shorts Program at the 1995
Sundance Film Festival and played at numerous other national and international film festivals. Spione next wrote and directed
The Playroom (1996), starring Pamela Holden Stewart, which was shown at the
Walter Reade Theatre in New York City as part of the "Independents Night" series and broadcast on the national cable program "Reel Street." Spione also produced and co-edited
John G. Young's first feature,
Parallel Sons, which premiered at Sundance in the Dramatic Competition and was later distributed by
Strand Releasing. During the 2000s, Spione began to produce and direct nonfiction films. In 2005, he made
American Farm, a feature-length documentary that focused on the predicament of his family's 5th-generation dairy farm in central New York State. The film premiered at the
Fenimore Art Museum in Cooperstown, New York, and went on to play theatres from the Berkshires to the Midwest. Spione often toured with the movie and would hold frequent Q&A sessions at each regional premiere to engage the audience directly in discussions about the state of family farming in America. In 2008, Spione collaborated with The Barrier Islands Center in Machipongo, Virginia on a historical documentary,
Our Island Home, about the last surviving residents of a vanished settlement on the
Eastern Shore of Virginia.
Our Island Home premiered at the Barrier Islands Center and was subsequently broadcast by
WHRO-TV in Norfolk, Virginia.11 Like
American Farm, Spione released the DVD version of the movie through his own production and distribution company, Morninglight Films. Over the ensuing years, Spione has returned to the area numerous times, working with the center to create a series of shorts about the unique history and culture of the region, including "Spirit of the Bird" (2012), "Watermen" (2014), "The Last Hunt Clubs" (2016), "Welcome to the Table" (2018), "Gatherings" (2020), "Island Empire: The Story of the Cobbs" (2022) and "The Almshouse" (2024). Released in 2010 was
Inauguration, a verite documentary concerning the events on the streets of Washington, D.C. leading up to the swearing-in of
Barack Obama. Spione's 2011 Oscar-nominated film
Incident in New Baghdad was a first-person account of the infamous
July 12, 2007, Baghdad airstrike that killed two
Reuters journalists, along with about a dozen other mostly unarmed individuals, in a suburb of Baghdad during one of the most violent and chaotic periods of the Iraq War.1 The film premiered theatrically at the 2011
Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, where it won the prize for Best Short Documentary. The director next completed a feature documentary called
Silenced, about the
Obama Administration's crackdown on U.S. national security whistleblowers including
Thomas Andrews Drake and
John Kiriakou. The film premiered at the
Tribeca Film Festival in April 2014.
Silenced was broadcast nationally on the
DirecTV Audience Channel in 2015, streamed worldwide on
Netflix, and was nominated for a News and Documentary
Emmy Award in the Outstanding Informational Long-Form Program category. Spione's most recent feature is 2017's
Awake, A Dream from Standing Rock, a collaborative work about the historic indigenous resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline project near Cannon Ball, North Dakota. The film was produced in partnership with directors
Josh Fox and
Myron Dewey, producer Doug Good Feather and writer Floris White Bull. The film premiered at the 2017
Tribeca Film Festival and subsequently streamed on
Netflix. Concurrent with his film directing career, Spione often worked as a film and video editor on independent dramatic and documentary features (
Darien Sills-Evans'
X-Patriots, Spencer Mandell and Raymond Pagnucco's ''God's Open Hand''), as well as numerous videos for national educational producer Human Relations Media. He is currently making a new documentary about the civil rights-era photographer John Shearer. ==Praise and criticism==