Directing
Aislinn Clarke is an Irish filmmaker. She is best known for directing the horror films The Devil's Doorway (2018) and Fréwaka (2024).
The documentary tracks the origins of the found footage technique and how it transformed with technological changes throughout the last few decades.
A young man has problems letting his recently-deceased wife go.
A pair of lighthouse keepers, father and son, meet a sorry fate in isolation while carrying out their duty.
Care worker Shoo, who is haunted by a personal tragedy, is sent to a remote village to care for an agoraphobic woman, who fears both her neighbours and the Na Sídhe – sinister folkloric entities she believes abducted her decades before.
When Tomás returns to his remote island holiday home he discovers his reclusive wife and child have vanished. With nowhere to turn and a storm approaching, he is forced to place his trust in the small community's lone retired police officer, Labhaoise, to investigate. As the search takes an unexpected turn, some uncomfortable truths are revealed. Meanwhile the storm looms ever closer.
The story of Helen Duncan, who became the last woman ever to be tried for witchcraft in Britain in 1933.
An introverted mother's worst fears are amplified when she is seemingly stalked by the children living in the woods surrounding her home.
In the autumn of 1960, Father Thomas Riley and Father John Thornton were sent by the Vatican to investigate a miraculous event in an Irish home for 'fallen women', only to uncover something much more horrific.