The Miserables | |
Director: | Benjamin Taylor |
Producer: | Peter Hort, Alex Lipman |
Starring: | Maggie Steed, Ian Hogg |
Cinematography: | Cenay Said |
Editing: | Kieran Waller |
Music: | Anne Chmelewsky |
Runtime: | 20 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
The Miserables is a short film (20 minutes) directed by Benjamin Taylor and written by Alex Lipman. Released in 2010 by University of Westminster, the film was a finalist at The 38th Annual Student Academy Awards in Beverly Hills,[1] and has been screened at festivals in the UK, USA, China, Russia, Germany and Italy.[2] The film won Best Drama at the 2011 Royal Television Society Student Awards where the short was considered by the jury to be outstanding. A very good emotional script, had been creatively executed with sensitivity, flair, restraint, and imagination.[3]
Struggling to cope with his wife Evelyn's (Maggie Steed) terminal illness, Murray Pickleton (Ian Hogg) constructs time machines out of their furniture in his efforts to relive their past and escape the present. Evelyn is skeptical, but when her doctor insists she is to be moved to a hospice, she joins her husband in remembering their life together and attempts to discuss his life after hers.
Category | Result | |
---|---|---|
Student Academy Awards | ||
Best Foreign Film | ||
Royal Television Society Student Awards | ||
Best Drama | ||
International Film and Video Festival of Beijing | ||
Audience Award | ||
International Film Festival | ||
Best Fiction Film | ||
Martha's Vineyard International Film Festival[4] | ||
Best Film | ||
Screentest Student Film Festival | ||
Best Film | ||
Best Drama | ||
Best Script |
In addition to receiving various awards and nominations, The Miserables has also been screened at many short film festivals around the world, including the following: