Stand Still at BFI London Film Festival: "Isabella WIng-Davey's film feels tender and raw"

“The film that has the most complete narrative trajectory is Stand Still, about a woman overwhelmed with postnatal depression. Help comes to the middle-class doctor just at the right time, and what follows in Isabella Wing-Davey’s film feels tender and raw. Zoë Tapper and Michelle Bonnard, who also wrote the film, give extraordinarily compassionate performances here.

These six films are all confidently made, and if this is the future of British film then we are in good hands. Together these directors, and their creatives, should be able to represent a modern, inclusive Britain.”

- - The Reviews Hub

Read the full review of the Shorts Program at BFI London Film Festival here

THE RAIN COLLECTOR premieres on Museum of Moving Image NYC

POPDUST interview with Isabella Wing-Davey (about "WAITING" and "The Rain Collector")

I spoke with Andrew Karpan from POPDUST about my 3 minute short film, "Waiting" which is now available online as well as casting, themes and my other work like "The Rain Collector".

"Her work is both impeccably produced and impeccably cast...[Wing-Davey has] "craft[ed] an immaculate filmic style, somewhere in that netherworld between Sofia Coppola's perfectly groomed costumes... and Wes Anderson's penchant for the pastels."

About WAITING: "Within three minutes, Wing-Davey is able to turn the energy of those moving parts into nothing short of a masterpiece of observation, the kind of space that immediately feels populated by real people."

"The Rain Collector" at ATHENA FILM FESTIVAL 2017

great times at Woodstock Film Festival with some great filmmakers

The wonderful  Ryan Dickie and Abby Horton from New Media Ltd were there with the very funny  "Club Policy" which you can now watch online here, and we were thrilled to have "The Rain Collector"  in the same shorts block as Stephanie Ellis and Traci Carlson with their short film "Baby Teeth".