Agnes was diagnosed with dementia in her fifties. Five years have passed and she is still struggling with her new identity, and the loss of who she once was. We follow Agnes in her quest for renewal and along the way our notions of what it means to have dementia are challenged and given a fresh perspective.
When bullied Molly Flowers declares a dislike for boys, her boozy and self-medicated mother invents a story to shock her into a more sympathetic view…the tale of how Molly was born a boy called Bradford Dillman but had her willy chopped off – takes on a life of its own.
A short film based on adaptations of three stories by O Henry. Adapted to take place in modern day London, it explores the theme of the characters' alienation (from reality and one another), which is so relevant to our contemporary, multicultural urban reality.
Two medical interns investigate a patient brought to hospital. When they search into her past, they discover disturbing events that put their lives in danger. At first rivals, the interns finally team up to uncover the secret of Patient 17.
Righting offers a glimpse into the world of Christopher Bailey, an eccentric signage enthusiast from Huntingdon. Chris is an anachronism - a Fred Dibnah fan displaced to his aunt’s basement in Hackney. He finds purpose in replacing missing letters on shop fronts, fashioning himself as ‘The Robin Hood of Signage’.
A minor earthquake shakes London in the night. Tom and Rose’s perfect marriage collides with sexual fantasy and exposes the cracks in their relationship. The aftershocks are more far-reaching than Tom and Rose could have imagined.
Bagong Silang is the name given to the community that has been living in Navotas Cemetery in the Philippines for around 40 years.
The film offers a glimpse into this exceptional and resilient community providing an insight into the day-to-day life of people born into the margins of society.
The documentary, "Cartografía de la soledad" (Cartography of Loneliness), is akin to a map tracing the emotions and feelings of women who find themselves totally alone on losing their husbands in three countries, India, Nepal and Afghanistan.
The choice of these three countries which are so near each other and have significant ethnic and religious differences is not by chance. India is the country with the most widows in the world, totalling over 45 million. In Nepal, half of the female population is widowed or have been abandoned by their husbands: they are called "child widows" or baikaylas. Afghanistan has the highest proportion of widows in the world after 30 years of war.
Tradition, society and religion have determined the course of their lives following their husbands' deaths. Many widows are abandoned by their families, or victim of women trafficking, or condemned to social ostracism.
War, AIDS and child marriages are the main factors behind these figures.
After living with them for 4 months, there have been impressive stories in a very determined historical, social and religious context, and also the medicine, human rights and education are intertwined in their lives.
A short film about teaching creativity by This Is It Collective.
Take:
A pinch of inspiration
A handful of joy
2 spoonfuls of courage
3/8 of a litre of desire
A splash of pride
3 heaped tablespoons of laughter
A kg of saltwater
A cup of going the distance
You’ll know when its ready…
This is a docudrama about 5 survivors of Mental Health problems It tells the true stories of these people as they struggle to stand up for human rights and choose the treatment best for their wellbeing. The film aims to spread the word about how people can recover from Mental Health problems and support Recovery's campaign to allow survivors to have control and capacity over how they are treated.
New York, London, Monroe is a memory piece reflecting the souls unrequited love for a place, or a life, it has never consciously visited. A Future Archive is projected, drawn from the Artist's past works.