Separate We Come, Separate We Go
Separate We Come, Separate We Go | |
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File:SWCSWG poster.png
Cannes Promotional Poster
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Directed by | Bonnie Wright |
Produced by | Rosalind Steven[1] |
Written by | Bonnie Wright |
Starring | David Thewlis Emily Dunham Shauna Macdonald |
Music by | Tom Recknell |
Cinematography | Arthur Loveday[2] |
Edited by | Daisy Moseley |
Production
company |
Bon Bon Lumiere
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Release dates
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Running time
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12 min |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £5,000[4] |
Separate We Come, Separate We Go is a 2012 British coming-of-age drama short film written and directed by Bonnie Wright.[5][6] It is Wright's directorial debut. The film had its world premiere at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival short film corner on 21 May 2012[3] and screened at the BAFTA Graduate on 11 June 2012.[7][8] The film premiered in USA at Gold Coast International Film Festival on 25 October 2013.[9][10]
Contents
Plot
Thea, a ten-year-old girl, lives with her mother in a town in East Sussex. One day while trailing the coast alone, she meets a man and becomes friends with him, starting a journey during which she finds possibilities she didn't know existed.
Cast
- David Thewlis as Norman
- Emily Dunham as Thea
- Shauna Macdonald as The Mother
Production
Development
Wright directed and wrote the screenplay for the film as a part of her graduation course at London College of Communication.[8] Wright produced the film by her own production company Bon Bon Lumiere[11] along with Rosalind Steven. Funding were also provided by a fish and chip shop located at Dungeness and Romney Marsh, where most of the filming took place as London College of Communication rules state that films can be funded by voluntary donations only.[12]
Filming
Filming took place at sparsely populated areas of Kent and East Sussex, including Dungeness, Romney Marsh, Lydd, Camber Sands, Rye Harbour, Winchelsea Beach and Dymchurch.[13]
Talking about the filming locations Wright said that "I wanted to make something personal and I’ve spent a lot of time in Dungeness, because my parents have a house just down the coast from there, so it has a strong connection to my family. Also, I was always a massive fan of Derek Jarman and he spent his last years there. I just love the strangeness of it, the bleakness. The more I’ve been there, the more I fall in love with it."[5] She also said that "Romney Marsh is an area where I spent a lot of time when I was a child. Growing up in a city such as London, it’s so confined sometimes that as a child there is no feeling of a horizon, there’s nothing beyond what you know. So for me I was so lucky to have that experience of spending a lot of time in open spaces such as Romney Marsh that I was able to gain that feeling of beyond. As a young child I was obsessed with horizons."[12]
Music
The score for Separate We Come, Separate We Go was composed by Tom Recknell,[14] who composed the original score titled The Birds for the film.[15]
Reception
The film received positive reception from critics after its premiere at Cannes Film Festival. Total Film in its review said that "it's a rather sweet, very personal story about a little girl who meets lovely David Thewis and learns to stretch her limitations."[16] Nick de Semlyen of Empire praised Wright's direction by saying that "it's an impressive first work from someone who clearly has ambition to burn."[17]
References
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External links
- Use dmy dates from May 2015
- Use British English from May 2015
- Pages with broken file links
- 2012 films
- English-language films
- Official website not in Wikidata
- 2010s drama films
- 2010s short films
- British coming-of-age films
- British independent films
- British short films
- British films
- Films set in Sussex
- Films shot in Kent
- Films set in Kent
- Films shot in England
- Films set in England
- Student films