Short films Tau has also directed several short films under his production company, Firebrand Hand Creative In 2014, Tau was named as one of "6 Young Asian American Filmmakers Who Are Shattering America's Film Bias" by
Mic Magazine. In 2018, a short documentary entitled
Nathan Jung v. Bruce Lee written and directed by Tau won Best Original Script and Best Comedy Short Film awards at the Winter 2018 Asians on Film Festival. The film recounts the true story of actor
Nathan Jung meeting
Bruce Lee for the first time on the set of the TV show,
Here Come the Brides in 1969, where Bruce played his first and last purely dramatic and non-martial arts U.S. TV role as Lin Sung in the episode "Marriage, Chinese Style." The film has also been an official selection of the 2018–2019 Asians on Film Festival of Shorts, the 2018 Taiwanese American Film Festival, the 2018
Vancouver Asian Film Festival, and the 2019
Seattle Asian American Film Festival. Upon
Nathan Jung's passing on April 24, 2021,
Nathan Jung v. Bruce Lee was shared and Jung's death was covered by outlets (with Tau being the source sharing the news) including
Variety,
Deadline Hollywood,
SyFy Wire,
The Independent (UK),
The Daily Express (UK),
News.com.au,
The New Zealand Herald,
NY Daily News,
Heavy.com,
Yahoo! Lifestyle,
Daily Star Trek News,
Comicbook.com,
Outsider,
AsAm News,
iHorror,
Giant Freakin Robot, and others. In 2011–2013, Tau directed, wrote (with Ed Moy) and produced a short film bio-pic about
Keye Luke (played by
Feodor Chin) entitled
Keye Luke, which premiered at the 2012
Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival. The film was made under a
Visual Communications "Armed with a Camera" Fellowship, and highlights
Luke's earlier roles as the first
Kato in the 1940s
Green Hornet film serials and the "Number One Son," Lee Chan, in the popular
Charlie Chan films of the 1930s. The film has also screened at over a dozen film festivals worldwide. The film's composer,
George Shaw, won a "Best Original Score" award at the Asians on Film Festival. The film also won an Audience Award at the 2014
HollyShorts Film Festival Monthly Screenings. "The Case" [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1770747/ is a genre-hybrid of a short film that melds genres such as Film Noir, Sci-Fi, Horror Camp (in the vein of
Ed Wood) and Spaghetti Westerns, and which stars Max Phyo,
Cyndee San Luis, Hidekun Hah and Oliver Seitz. It has screened at The
Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, The
San Diego Asian Film Festival, The
Cannes Film Festival Short Film Corner (Court Metrage), and The Capalbio International Short Film Festival in Rome, Italy, founded by
Michelangelo Antonioni. He has written and directed a web series entitled "Quantum Cops" , a time and dimension traveling, buddy-cop action/sci-fi-/comedy that he co-created with Joshua Murphy and which stars
Kelvin Han Yee,
Feodor Chin, Joshua Murphy,
David Huynh, and
Ina-Alice Kopp. He has also written and directed a short film entitled "Incentivus" about a Writer (
Archie Kao) and imagination, hallucinations and dreams. The film stars
Archie Kao,
Mei Melançon,
Jessika Van, and
Cyndee San Luis. In 2012, he collaborated with rappers/comedians
The Fung Brothers (David and Andrew Fung) and directed, produced and edited a comedy sketch film about
Jeremy Lin that The Fung Brothers wrote entitled "The Jeremy Lin Effect 2 (Linsanity)" where an Asian American girl named "Babe" (played by
Jessika Van) only attracted to white men (including her boyfriend, Bret, played by Scott Lilly) is suddenly attracted to Asian American men (including a student named "Jeremy", played by Andrew Fung) after seeing clips of Jeremy Lin play. The video went viral and was mentioned on The Washington Post, the Associated Press and Yahoo! Sports, and on Taiwanese News Channel
CTV among other news outlets.
Music videos In 2011, Tau directed a music video for YouTube Sensation and singer-Songwriter-Actress
Megan Lee for her second original single, "Destiny." The music video also stars
Kelvin Han Yee,
Megan Lee,
Jessika Van,
Yul Spencer and
Ina-Alice Kopp. In 2013, Tau directed the Los Angeles segment of a music video for a track from
Dumbfoundead and Paul Kim entitled "No Turning Back," the song being produced and composed by
CHOPS aka Scott "Chops" Jung (formerly of The
Mountain Brothers) for his EP project, "Strength in Numbers," which compiles tracks from a number of leading Asian American hip hop, rap and R&B artists. In addition to
Dumbfoundead/Parker and Paul Kim, the music video also starred Jennifer Field and Cindy Bru, and NY-based Director/rap artist JL Jupiter (Jeff Lek) directed the New York segment as well as edited the music video.
Producing In 2024-25, Tau executive produced a short film entitled
Clean Slate directed by Emily May Jampel, also produced by Yoko Kohmoto, and starring as well as written by Josephine Chiang and Joyce Keokham. The film made its world premiere at the
Aspen Shortsfest, and also screened at the
Palm Springs International Film Festival,
Frameline Film Festival 49,
New Fest 37, the
Nashville Film Festival, the
Cleveland International Film Festival, the
San Diego Asian Film Festival, the Oakland Drunken Film Festival, the
Mardi Gras Film Festival (Australian Premiere), the Nitehawk Shorts Festival at the
Nitehawk Cinema, and
NoBudge (Online Premiere). In 2025, Tau partnered up again with director Emily May Jampel to executive produce a short film she directed and wrote entitled
Half Moon. The film is currently in post-production. The same year he also assisted with the production of another short film directed and written by Emily May Jampel,
Virgo Season. In 2025-2026, Tau executive produced a feature film directed and written by Andy Fidoten entitled
Something You Should Know About Me which was also executive produced by
Lilly Wachowski and made its world premiere at the 2026
Tribeca Film Festival. In 2026, Tau also partnered up with
Gold House,
Seed&Spark and
Jeff Yang to underwrite and support the 2026 AAPI Renaissance Rally, a crowdfunding campaign to fund film projects from Asian American & Pacific Islander filmmakers. ==Legal career==