

19 minutes to make you believe hope can bend reality itself.
When a disillusioned woman is implicated in the disappearance of a lonely aging scientist, she must convince the police that hope has the power to bridge dimensions.
Acting
Lipinski's Harold aches with forgotten brilliance and desperate longing.
Cinematography
Cramped spaces that somehow feel infinite—dimensions collapse visually.
Writing
Dialogue that trusts silence; exposition through absence, not explanation.

Director
Camille Hollett-French
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The film's title refers to both electrical discharge and human initiative—Hollett-French deliberately never clarifies which spark saves Harold.
Shot entirely in a single repurposed medical facility over three days; the claustrophobic corridors were not sets but actual abandoned hospital wings.