The morning after the night before
Two flatmates argue at a table, by a door
Repeated scenes, revealing more
Showing the things you never saw
Same River Twice is a psychological, Urban Horror building to a chilling and shocking climax.
Reflecting on colour, the anthropology of noise, our perception of listening, Vivarta alludes to early optical film experiments with sound and visuals, sometimes called 'colour music' and plays with the experience of a persistence of vision.
Three days in the life of four friends after which there's no going back. That moment in your life when everything changes forever.
Liza (Kat Redstone) hovers precariously between change and self-destruction, between leaving her doomed relationship with girlfriend Sally and finding success with their band, Blanket. Sally (Sophie Anderson) works nights in a dead end job, clings to her fantasies of a better life and ignores the chaos all around her. Vin (Kai Brandon Ly) works as a rent boy, is secretly in love with Sally and in denial about everything else. Jamie (Collin Clay Chace) works nights in a gay cabaret bar, but longs to break free of his friends and their drug-infested dramas and settle down with a nice man.
In the three days leading up to Liza's 25th birthday things finally come to a head between Liza and Sally. After a failed birthday dinner the four friends are plunged into emotional meltdown at an illegal rave and by the end of the night there’s no going back to how things were.
Economic times are tough, but Scottish business visionary Shona Campbell has an answer.
Shona candidly relates the meteoric rise of her company, Circularity Thinking, and unveils the methodology behind their new business model, Thinking Inside The Circle.
Extraordinary hula hooping combines with glossy corporate locations into a riotous business manifesto.
In a world where bogeymen roam freely, devouring people randomly and the only creatures they fear are dogs, old dog does her best to defend the family home.
On September 17th 2010 Pope Benedict came to London, he was met by Catholic well-wishers and protestors alike. Who would want to protest the Pope and why? Candid reactions from Christians (Catholics & Protestants) to the papal visit. Filmed under Act of Settlement 1700.
A female gure tells us the possible journeys of gures in this gothic space, playing all the parts of girl, bride, woman.
A dress is stolen, returned, rebuffed. A dialogue of rising and falling, returning and escape.
This is Not Jane.
The film depicts one of the world's most notoriously private artist, Lucian Freud. At the core of the film is a sequence that sees Freud and dancer, Amy Hollingsworth in a dance of reminiscence; as though she is a memory of the remarkable characters that have passed through the studio.