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BAFTA-winning ‘Bait’ director Mark Jenkin’s next film kicks off shooting

Enys Men is described as an ‘ecosophical horror’.

Here’s some positive news during these troubled time; Mark Jenkin’s next film Enys Men, an ‘ecosophical horror’, has commenced filming within the Cornish landscape. Produced by Denzil Monk for his Cornwall-based production company BOSENA, Enys Men is the follow-up to Bait (2019), the highly-acclaimed, award-winning drama focussing on the issues surrounding the gentrification of a small Cornish fishing village.  

Image provided by PR

Set in 1973, Enys Men, pronounced ‘Enys Mane’ meaning ‘stone island’ in the Cornish language, deals with a woman, played by Mary Woodvine, who starred in Bait and whose credits include Judge John Deed, Our Friends in the North, and Eastenders.  Woodvine’s character is alone on a remote Cornish island from winter into spring as a Volunteer for The Wildlife Trust, observing an extremely rare flower that only grows in this one place, on land contaminated by an old Cornish tin mine.  Flickers of past events weave through the Volunteer’s ritualised existence. On the brow of the hill, in the middle of the island, stands a Bronze Age standing stone, which may or may not be moving closer to her cottage.

The film also sees a return of fellow Bait star Ed Rowe, introduces young actor Flo Crowe and features Mary’s father, John Woodvine.

Co-financed by Film4 and supported by Falmouth University’s Sound/Image Cinema Lab, the Cornish Mining World Heritage Site and Johnny Fewings Media Consultancy, Enys Men builds upon BOSENA’s clear commitment to making creatively and critically successful films which follow ‘stepping lightly’ regenerative principles of production.

More news on this one as it comes in.

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