Director
En 1665, la peste negra diezmó considerablemente la población de Londres. Una leyenda dice que un famoso monje y médico de la peste inició el culto del sacerdote oscuro. Uno de los lugares en los que actuó fue el orfanato de Ludgate. Casi 350 años después, una ambiciosa estudiante de arqueología obsesionada con la historia del lugar decide hacer una última incursión. Sobre el orfanato pesa una orden de demolición tras el hallazgo de la bacteria de la peste...
Director
Paul, a young man from London, arrives in the small Nova Scotia town of Milestone, where his long lost father was last seen years earlier. Paul is eager to find out what brought his father to this remote community. He meets Rauchine, a young, beautiful and unaffected girl who lives with her unstable mother and domineering grandmother on a nearby island, who is eking out a harsh and isolated living. Paul finds himself enmeshed in a web of jealousy, bitterness and fear as his attraction to Rauchine begins to grow. After a failed attempt to leave the island with Paul, Rauchine must make a crucial decision and break the cycle of violence and death that has marked her life.
Lighting Camera
A short film exploring the imagery of medical and scientific experimentation.
Director
Camera Operator
Ostia is a fascinating short film directed by Julian Cole and produced for the Royal College of Art, which reconstructs the events leading up to the murder of Pier Paolo Pasolini. Ostia relocates the proceedings to London and stars Derek Jarman as Pasolini. The film features an evocative dream sequence which is accompanied by poignant excerpts from Pasolini’s own poetry, as read by Jarman.
Cinematography
Ostia is a fascinating short film directed by Julian Cole and produced for the Royal College of Art, which reconstructs the events leading up to the murder of Pier Paolo Pasolini. Ostia relocates the proceedings to London and stars Derek Jarman as Pasolini. The film features an evocative dream sequence which is accompanied by poignant excerpts from Pasolini’s own poetry, as read by Jarman.