

God's cosmic do-over goes sideways when Eden 2.0 produces the same old drama.
With mankind wiped from the face of the earth, God retires to a cabin in the woods to start the Adam-and-Eve experiment over again. As the decades go by and the familiar patterns - and setbacks - continue, this version of the first family will be faced with an unimaginable choice.
Acting
Andrés Erickson's Abel simmers with inherited resentment you can taste.
Writing
Ritter's script treats Genesis like a failed startup pitch—brutal, funny, sad.
Director
Tim Ritter
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Ritter shot this in his actual backyard over 18 months with a $12K budget, proving cosmic scope needs imagination more than money.
The fruit-eating scene is filmed like a horror movie because Ritter wanted audiences to feel original sin as visceral betrayal, not abstract theology.