Docs

  • Where Dragons Live

    By Suzanne Raes

    A Co Production with Ilja Roomans from Docmakers, Netherlands Film Funded and Supported by Screen Scotland. Worldwide sales handled via Film Harbour.

    Where the Dragons Live follows an established family in England who are in the process of losing their ancestral home.

    Dragons receives its World Premiere at Sheffield Doc Fest 2024.

Development

  • Love Letters

    By Daniel Cook

    Feature Documentary in development with Screen Scotland and BFI Doc Society.

    Love Letters is a portrait of people living on the fringes of the North East Coast, each taking time to reflect on relationships and the importance of community in hard times

  • Your Honour

    By Bircan Birol

    Feature Documentary in development with Screen Scotland.

    Efruz, a young Kurdish woman is fighting to become the first openly transgender lawyer in a rapidly changing Turkey; seeking hope, solidarity and healing within her community.

  • Miss American Pie

    By Maximilien Dejoie

    Feature Documentary in development.

    An unexpected spiritual experience in a small Midwestern chapel gives Katelyn a clear vision of heaven and a firm understanding of the nature of good and evil. Having left the Catholic faith years prior, she immediately finds herself a revert and renounces nearly twenty years of work in the adult entertainment industry. However, the pursuit presents challenges as she seeks to find balance between her relationship with God and her established titles as a musician and writer in rock and roll.

    Katelyn’s journey is a testament to the transformative power of faith and the quest for personal emancipation from a former life of darkness.

  • Don't Say Gay

    By Sarah Drummond

    Don’t Say Gay tells the story of the introduction of a homophobic law, Section 28 by the British government in the 1980s and the subsequent fight back and repeal. The law forbade the “promotion of homosexuality” by any local councils in Britain which meant that teachers believed they could discuss any LGBTQ+ themes in schools. The law stretched further to impact the arts, libraries and local authorities.