Buckskin (2026)

An experimental portrait of the filmmaker’s grandfather: Carroll B. Williams Jr., a ground-breaking African-American forester, reflecting on his work and legacy in the twilight of his life.

SHORT DOCUMENTARY BY MARS VERRONE
  • Carroll B. Williams Jr. (1929-2024) was the first African-American to receive a doctorate in forestry and entomology, the first African-American scientist to be hired by the U.S. Forest Service, and among the first African-Americans to be a part of the environmental science and forestry faculties at both Yale and UC Berkeley. Featuring stunning 16mm cinematography, this experimental documentary explores the life and legacy of a groundbreaking scientist through intimate conversation with his daughter and grandchild. The film engages questions around personal and collective memory, the human/nature divide, the ongoing impact of settler-colonialism in the Americas, and the possibilities and limitations of an individual human life in effecting social change. At times, Buckskin is grand in its scope: envisioning how white supremacy has shaped human societies and natural environments alike over nearly a century. At other times, the film is deeply personal: a moving portrait of a fascinating and exceptional person told from the perspective of a loving and curious grandchild.

  • 2026 / 17 mins / USA

    English with English subtitles

  • Director: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

    Producer: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

    Editor: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

    Cinematographer: Stella Rae Binion

    Sound Recording: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

    Additional Sound Recording: Ripley Barnes

    Post Sound Services: Nocturnal Sound

    Re-Recording Mixer: Eli Cohn

    Sound Editors: Jack Sasner, Sam Berliner-Sachs

    Music: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

    Editorial Consultants: César Martínez Barba, Yana Nafysa Dombrowsky-M’Baye

    Lab Services: Colorlab 

    Colorist: Mars (Marianne) Verrone

  • Mars Verrone (Director, Producer, Editor, Composer) 

    Mars Verrone is an award-winning filmmaker, musician, and educator from Los Angeles, CA, currently based in Brooklyn, NY. As a first-time producer, Mars produced Oscar-shortlisted feature documentary UNION, (dir. Stephen Maing, Brett Story) which premiered at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Documentary Competition and won a special jury prize for “The Art of Change.” The film was distributed by PBS POV and the Criterion Channel. Mars received a Cinema Eye Honors Award for “Outstanding Achievement in Production.” In 2022, Mars directed and produced award-winning short documentary GOLDEN VOICE, which continues to be programmed at LGBTQ+ festivals and events across the globe. Mars is a Sundance Documentary Producers Fellow, NBC Original Voices Artist Mentor and Fellow, PGA Create Fellow, Firelight Media Impact Fellow, Brown Girls Doc Mafia Sustainable Artist Fellow, Dear Producer Mentee, and was selected for DOC NYC’S 2024 “40 Under 40” cohort. Their work has been supported by Sundance Institute, Ford Foundation, Field of Vision, and the International Documentary Association, among others.

    Stella Rae Binion (Director of Photography) 

    Stella Rae Binion (they/she) aspires to breathe underwater, embodying an ongoing project of “undrowning” (after Alexis Pauline Gumbs) and speculations of Black loving continuance. Stella Rae is a Chicago-based poet, filmmaker, 16mm cinematographer, printmaker, and bodywork practitioner. Their practice includes poetic research, investigations within fugitivity and the Black outdoors, honor work as prayer and divination, witnessing through language and imaging, and the celebration and protection of Black queer people. Stella Rae received a BA in Media Theory and Creative Writing from Brown University in 2023.