Two Toronto filmmakers have captured second prize in the YouTube Project:Direct contest, garnering them a ticket to the Sundance Film Festival in Utah.

The $2,500 US prize was handed to Jason Gossbee and Ben Goldenberg for their five-minute short, White Collar Criminals.

The top award went to Blake Edwards of Charlotte, N.C., with ¡Perfecto!.

Edwards, who also wins $2,500 US, has the privilege of screening his film at Sundance in addition to attending the festival.

Gossbee and Goldenberg, who will share the prize money, spent only three days and $200 to produce their project.

The YouTube page for White Collar Criminals shows more than 157,000 people have viewed it.

The film, complete with soundtrack, is a black comedy with an intriguing twist at the end. It concerns the search for four well-educated, polite, classical music-loving thieves who rob jewelry stores.

The opportunity to hang out with Hollywood's movers and shakers at next week's Sundance festival in Park City could spell new opportunities for the recent film school grads.

YouTube has promised to hand out DVDs of the top three films to movie executives at the festival.

Goldenberg just graduated from the NY Film Academy in Los Angeles and Gosbee graduated from the Toronto Film School.