Dimensions (2011 film)

Dimensions is a 2011 science fiction-love story film set in the 1920s and 1930s. The film was directed by Sloane U'Ren and written by her spouse Ant Neely. The film is U'Ren's feature film directorial debut and is also known as Dimensions: A Line, A Loop, A Tangle of Threads.

Dimensions
Title Art
Directed bySloane U'Ren
Screenplay byAnt Neely
Produced bySloane U'Ren
Ant Neely
StarringHenry Lloyd-Hughes
Camilla Rutherford
Patrick Godfrey
Olivia Llewellyn
Sean Heart
CinematographySimon Dennis
Edited byAdam Garstone
Music byAnt Neely
Production
company
Sculptures of Dazzling Complexity Ltd
Release date
  • 21 September 2011 (2011-09-21) (Cambridge Film Festival)
Running time
99 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£100,000

Dimensions premiered as part of the 2011 Cambridge Film Festival (U.K.) and outsold, per screen, the U.K. premieres of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, The Help and Midnight in Paris.[1] After the Cambridge screenings, the film underwent a minor re-edit and was finished in early 2012. Dimensions was voted Best Film 2012 at the 37th Boston Science Fiction Film Festival and awarded the Gort Award.[2] Previous Gort Award winners have included Duncan Jones' Moon.[3] The film went on to win Best Film at the London Independent Film Festival [4] and Best Film at the Long Island International Film Expo.[5] Director Sloane U'Ren was also awarded Best Director at the Long Island International Film Expo.

Premise

edit

The film follows Stephen, a brilliant young scientist who lives in Cambridge, England, in what appears to be the 1920s. His world is turned upside down upon meeting a charismatic and inspirational professor at a garden party, who demonstrates to Stephen and his friends what life would be like if they were one-, or two-dimensional beings. He then proceeds to explain that by manipulating other dimensions, time travel may actually be possible.

Soon after the professor's visit, Stephen, his cousin, Conrad, and his neighbor, Victoria, were horsing around by a well. Conrad throws Victoria's skipping rope down the well. Stephen's mother catches the boys rolling around fighting and drags them into the house by the ears, leaving Victoria alone to play outside by herself. After some time, she decides to climb down the well to get her skipping rope. She never climbs back out of the well.

As Stephen's life unfolds, events lead him to dedicate himself to turning the Professor's theories of time travel into reality. Jealousy, love, obsession, temptation and greed surround him, influencing his fragile mind and the direction of his work.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

Sloane U'Ren and Ant Neely have worked in the film industry for many years on large Hollywood films and television productions,[6] U'Ren as art director and designer with Neely as a composer and musician.[7] The couple wanted to make their own film for many years and rather than wait for a large studio to invest decided to produce the film independently, Neely said, "We could wait for someone to come knock on our door and get old waiting, or we could just go and do it."[8]

U'Ren and Neely sold their house to help finance the production, a move that caused some media attention in the UK.[9][10]

Principal photography started on 26 July 2010 and ended on 21 August 2010.[11] Dimensions joins a small but growing list of feature films shot entirely using DSLR cameras, at times the film used three Canon 5D Mk II and a Canon 7D.

The film was shot entirely in and around Cambridge, England including Downing College, Cambridge University. Sloane U'Ren and Ant Neely, along with almost all of the cast, attended the world premiere: they introduced themselves before the screening, and answered questions about the project and how it was completed afterwards.

Music

edit

The original score was composed by Neely and recorded at British Grove Studios with the London Metropolitan Orchestra.

References

edit
  1. ^ Cambridge Evening News[1]
  2. ^ New Empress Magazine[2] Archived 25 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Wired Magazine[3]
  4. ^ London Independent Film Festival"[4]"
  5. ^ IMDB"[5]"
  6. ^ Credits: Sloane U'Ren official page, 2009
  7. ^ Neely Credits: Ant Neely IMDB, 2005
  8. ^ Ant Neely: BBC News Interview on YouTube BBC, 2010
  9. ^ BBC News: BBC News Interview on YouTube BBC, 2010
  10. ^ Chris Elliot: Cambridge Evening News CEN, 2010
  11. ^ Cast and Crew: Dimensions Blog official page, 2009
edit