
A TALE OF TWO MOUNTAINS sees director Martin Stirling follow Stuart Baker-Brown as he climbs 6500 meters in Nepal to challenge his diagnosis of schizophrenia.
Mera Peak is the world’s highest trekking mountain in the world and Stuart is no ordinary climber. Coping with freezing temperatures, a lack of oxygen and physical fatigue, Stuart must also win a battle with his mind.
The documentary will follows Stuart as he prepares and then climbs Mera Peak to become the first man with schizophrenia to challenge his own mental health in a defining journey which will see him conquered a 10 year conflict with his mind.
| A Tale of Two Mountains |

Award winning filmmaker, Rob Brown, will travel to Vietnam to produce a documentary on critically acclaimed war photographer Catherine Leroy who died last year from lung cancer.
Following on from his drama FAMILY PORTRAIT, Rob is planning a new feature-length documentary revealing the dramatic story of Catherine Leroy who left a Paris convent school aged 21 in 1966 and booked a one-way ticket to Vietnam to become the renowned Robert Capa award-winning war photographer who gave the Vietnam war "a
human face".
| One Way Ticket trailer | |
| One Way Ticket |

A story about compassion, loyalty and friendship from a group of teenagers trying to break out of their homeless lives in Russian sewers.
A Russian Fairytale is a story told through the eyes of young adults and children who have spent much of their lives living an almost fairytale existence on the streets of Russia. They escaped the trouble and stress that was affecting the majority of adults in the early 90s and found they could lead a life by their own rules, sleeping where they found shelter and not having to worry about school or work. Now on the brink of adulthood, they are faced with the difficult task of leaving life on the streets and returning to the society which has forgotten them.
Directed by first time documentary director Jake Mobbs.
| A Russian Fairytale trailer | |
| A Russian Fairytale |

The Bedouin culture in Southern Israel is disappearing fast. Communities are being relocated into urban settlements, centuries of heritage remains unrecognized by the State of Israel and villages are under constant threat of demolition. ONLY INHABITANTS will empower Bedouin communities with new skills to record their culture and provide them with an opportunity to have their voices heard through DVD media and the internet.
Working in partnership with UK and Israel NGO’s, charities and media organisations, ONLY INHABITANTS will train families to record their own experiences of life using digital media video and photographic equipment providing an opportunity for them to express their creatively and tell their own stories. Currently, with no access to digital media resources, ONLY INHABITANTS will provide the equipment and training in a unique project which aims to preserve Bedouin heritage for future generations. Bedouin families will working alongside a professional media education team to record an intimate insight into their own lives giving their communities an voice.
| Only Inhabitants |

By 2010 more than 50 million homeowners will be banned from line drying clothes outdoors for the sake of preserving property value and prudishness, the ban which infringes on a homeowners civil rights is contributing to the environmental and energy crisis, considering the dryer is responsible for 6% of the average households energy bill, as well as costing the U.S. an estimated $5 billion annually.
This is a film about freedom, communities and clotheslines. Drying For Freedom follows the fight for the right to dry clothes naturally revealing the protests, passions, politics and murders asking how did drying clothes become a life threatening, environmental social catastrophe? Why can’t we be free and dry clothes naturally?
This is a film about washing lines, the environment and freedom directed award-winning director Steven Lake.
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| Drying for Freedom |

