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- A moving portrait of social documentary photographer and trailblazer Tish Murtha, who dedicated her life to documenting the lives of working-class communities in North East England.
- A comprehensive history of the medium and art of motion pictures.
- In 1993, 16-year-old Brandon Lee enrolled at Bearsden Academy, a secondary school in a well-to-do suburb of Glasgow, Scotland. What followed over the next two years became the stuff of legend.
- When the question is to be or not to be, there is only one answer.
- Based on Jane Rogers' acclaimed novel, "Island" is a tale of yearning and retribution. Consumed by thoughts of revenge, Nikki Black goes to a remote island to seek out the mother (Janet McTeer,) who abandoned her at birth.
- A fictional Alfred Hitchcock narrates an explanation of some of the lesser known cinematic techniques he used in his movies, richly illustrated with clips from his entire 50-year career.
- From the earliest days of movie-making to the present day, through rare and unseen footage, we see the changing relationship the British have with their land. From images of local celebrations and festivals to agricultural practices through the seasons, village life and lost crafts.
- Mark Cousins offers hope and optimism while he explores different movies and talks about how technology is changing the course of cinema in a new century and how Covid continues the process.
- What is the meaning of life, death and all the rest? Max Kestner gives an energetic and imaginative answer in his adventurous film, which begins with the killing of a young giraffe from Copenhagen.
- Terror lurks in the old orphanage, beneath a disused London hospital - a Seventeeth Century malevolence, the Plague Doctor, has returned to complete his evil masterpiece...
- The hunters of the Scottish folklore creature camped out on the shores of the loch throughout the 1970s and 1980s, chasing but never finding the dinosaur-like creature.
- A documentary that spans 13 decades and five continents to give a guided tour of the art and craft of movies as told by female filmmakers.
- A visual, poetic depiction of Belfast and its citizens, told with love and passion of someone, who has left the city many years ago but is still fascinated by it. Themes brought up in the film range from the landscapes surrounding the city, its changing architecture and social structure to the political and personal repercussions of the Northern Irish conflict.
- Comedy drama about a group of city dwellers who arrive on the island of Skerra to view the local lighthouse, little knowing that all who set foot in it are cursed.
- Experimental documentary that looks at the Hiroshima nuclear bomb and its legacy.
- Siri wakes to find herself trapped inside a brutalist candy-coloured dreamhouse, where she and her fellow inmates are forced to go head-to-head in a series of demeaning tasks.
- At a girls' boarding school in the remote Scottish Highlands in 1986, lonely 15-year-old Reg stares longingly out her dorm window at the chainsaw-wielding tree surgeon working on the school grounds. Reg and her classmates must take part in a self-defense exercise: The Attack Test. Reg must walk alone through the woods until she is attacked by her masked teacher Mike, at which point she must defend herself using force. This is intended as real-life preparation for these privileged and inexperienced women living in an isolated world where rape paranoia was rife. Full of trepidation, Reg walks into the woods where Mike is waiting, but the test does not go according to plan.
- A bizarre journey to Africa with a vegan filmmaker and a big game hunter. Committed vegan, David Graham Scott, follows old colonial relic Guy Wallace as he prepares to go on his last big game hunt and fulfil his ambition to bag the fearsome cape buffalo. It's Guy's last chance to relive his glory days in the African bush and finally lay down his guns. The oddball relationship of Scott and Wallace is the central drive of the film as the director explores the ethics of big game hunting and even questions his own animal rights stance when lured in by the thrill of the hunt. The End of the Game has at its core a great character in a great location going on an epic journey to an equally marvellous setting. Guy Wallace lives in a ramshackle caravan on a barren moor in the northern highlands of Scotland. He sits surrounded by memories of the past: a past that includes going patrols with the King's African Rifles, periods as a mercenary in the turbulent post-colonial phase and as a tracker for big game hunters in Kenya and Tanzania. Filmmaker David Graham Scott lives near the old eccentric in the Caithness moors. He's built a solid relationship with the man he often refers to as 'Sir' Guy and that is fully explored within both the badlands of Caithness and the South African bush. The belligerent old colonial is cut from the same mould as Molly Dineen's central character in Home from the Hill: a man out of time and out of place. The End of the Game is a POV director led narrative questioning the ethics of game hunting and built around the oddball coupling of a vegan and hunter.
- The story of the extraordinary friendship between Scottish film maker Bill Douglas and his lifelong companion and collaborator Peter Jewell.
- Created with Sundance Collab, for forty days, filmmaker and writer Mark Cousins takes audiences on a journey through cinema.
- The host of a low-rent paranormal activity show learns that her show is to be axed and is determined to go out with a bang.
- Excluded from being Warrior Queen in her Highland village's battle re-enactment, a middle-aged woman must rediscover her courage and answer the battle-cry in order to retrieve her family's honour.
- 'Mark Cousins' goes on a road trip with Iranian filmmaker 'Abbas Kiarostami'.
- When a young showman visits a new town he struggles to fit in. Seagulls follows Ryan as he attempts to bond with a group of local boys. The film explores the subtle differences in the lives of these teenage boys and how cultural bonds are deeply ingrained and are never far from the surface.
- Marking a hundred years since the Russian revolution, Hollywood actor Brian Cox travels to Russia to discover stories of Scots who made this vast country their own. Brian first spent time in Russia during the communist era. Brian taught theatre students at Moscow Arts Theatre for a scheme called Raising the Curtain. His time there gave Brian a life long passion for the country and now he travels back to meet the students and see the dramatic changes. Brian revisits the turbulent times of Russian history including the 1917 revolution, the Stalinist purges and the siege of Leningrad which created surprising bonds between our two countries. The series also covers three hundred years of shared history between Russia and Scotland, from the mercenary who helped shape Peter the Great's army, to the Scottish industrialist who introduced football to St Petersburg. It also celebrates the poetry of Lermontov and his 'Yearning' for the Scottish Highlands as well as the Russian passion for Robert Burns.
- Director Dhivya-Kate Chetty tells her family's story, providing a personal and moving account of apartheid and the fight for its downfall.
- Thousands of black soldiers fought in the First World War. Poet Jackie Kay tells the story of one of them - Arthur Roberts. Arthur grew up in Glasgow and joined the King's Own Scottish Borderers in 1917.
- The extraordinary story of amateur filmmaker, Harry Birrell, the man who captured his life on camera. It's one man's cinematic vision of the 20th century and his own incredible journey through it.
- Digging peat for food and board on a rundown Scottish Highland croft, Georgios discovers the stark difference between choosing to disappear and losing yourself completely.
- Tracing the history and influence of Iranian cinema and its filmmakers.
- Drama centring on a grieving pharmacist and a trifle-loving methadone patient.
- When a stuffy retired Judge is forced to spend time with his 10 year-old Nephew, the boy unexpectedly reignites his imagination, changing his life forever. This heart-warming story coincidentally popped into my head just as Screen South launched their fantastic Innovation Shorts Scheme. I never thought I'd have the chance to make another short film as ambitious as The Happiness Thief. This time however I am venturing into state of the art 3D technology and CGI animation to tell an enchanting children's story inspired by my recent fatherhood. The film celebrates our ability to imagine and reminds us that: imagination can be forgotten, but never lost.
- A misguided monkey believes he is destined for the moon.
- A history of the Scottish accent on television and film.
- A young boy braves the mean marvelous streets of North Glasgow to shepherd his drunken father home safely.
- A film about the handful of streets around the Cowgate in Edinburgh which have long housed a proud Irish diaspora. A film about folk music and its power to connect people.
- An adventurous young backpacker returns home on Christmas eve eager to be reunited with his beloved family. Confusion turns to horror as he discovers a seemingly innocuous transgression has unleashed a catastrophic chain of events.
- Shopping for a new couch pushes Sam over the edge and he announces that he can't do this anymore with Judy and that they are finished. The two break-up and begin to split up their possessions. However, like the song says, breaking up is hard to do.
- Julie, a young barmaid, must decide between responsibility and friendship when an old friend reappears.
- For 45 years after World War II, the Soviet Union and the West were enemies. Jenna Watt wrote and performed an award-winning play about the Scottish-based nuclear deterrent, now she travels through the country unearthing Cold War stories.
- The tale of a child zombie