Project Detail

Lost Hearts

Synopsis

This is a modern working of the classic ghost story by M R James. Lost Hearts has terrifed audiences for over 100 years, we intend to terrify many more!

Details

Year
2007
Type of project
Shorts
Running time
56 mins
Format
Digital, DVD
Director
Patrick Amery 1st Feature
Producer
Patrick Benedictus
Editor
Eddy Kalinski
Screenwriter
Patrick Benedictus
Director of Photography
Jon Galione
Production Designer
Heli Tudgay
Sound
Mike Taylor
Composer
Trackline
Principal cast
Julian Mohn, Steve Raymond, Sarah Whitehouse, Glyn Wade, Bryn Whitmore, Danni Whitmore

Genre

Categories

Production Status

Production Company

Cuchulaine Films,

Arden House,
7 Stoke Road,
Bishops Cleeve,
Glos GL52 8RP
UK

T+44 (0)12 4267 7495

Sales Company

Cuchulaine Films,

Arden House,
7 Stoke Road,
Bishops Cleeve,
Glos GL52 8RP
UK

T +44 (0)12 4267 7495

Page updates

This page was last updated on 12th May 2025. Please let us know if we need to make any amendments or request edit access by clicking below.

See also

You may also be interested in other relevant projects in the database.

No Women No Children No Women No Children

Director: Akporé Uzoh

Year: 2026

The aftermath of a sexual assault (rape). Exploring the deep-felt consequences for all involved. At its heart an epic story of a couple's fight for the survival of their love.

Jamie Bamber, Ava Griffith and Kerry Norton Bad Form

Director: Alys Metcalf

Year: 2025

With her teenage daughter being relentlessly bullied for her appearance, her mother - an esteemed plastic surgeon - finds herself in a complex moral dilemma.

Virginia Wool's Night & Day Virginia Woolf's Night & Day

Director: Tina Gharavi

Year:

Based on Virginia Woolf’s funniest novel, NIGHT AND DAY is an un-romantic comedy about a passionate astronomer Katharine Hilbery who does everything she can to avoid romantic love and marriage. Fun and contemporary in tone, this refreshing film showcases an ensemble of humourous performances against the ravishing backdrop of London in 1910, advances in science and technology and crumbling Edwardian patriarchy. Virginia’s story is as relevant to today as it ever was: women balancing romantic love with careers!