

Four friends, one ghost, and a guy who thinks making a movie will fix grief. Spoiler: it won't.
They lived intensely. They were beautiful. They were inseparable. They were five but now there's only four of them - A group of childhood friends drowned in the murky waters of grief, a brutal return to reality - Arthur refuses to grow up without his friend and tries to get away by pursuing a dream that was previously buried: writing a movie. But he can't prevent the demons of the past from re-emerging - Torn between love and friendship he gradually loses control, at the risk of dragging everyone into his downfall.
Acting
Dylan Raffin's unraveling is uncomfortably real — no notes.
Direction
Jaillette packs a feature's worth of emotional damage into 37 minutes.
Writing
The script knows grief makes people insufferable — and leans in.
Director
Damien Jaillette
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The 37-minute runtime is deliberate — short enough to feel like a memory, long enough to suffocate.
Damien Jaillette cast mostly unknowns and reportedly kept the fifth friend's face out of frame entirely until deep into production.
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