

Anya Taylor-Joy interrogates an IRA killer in this 18-minute gut-punch of truth and consequences.
In the aftermath of The Troubles in Northern Ireland, Conor Hurt confesses his involvement in the IRA to a reporter who is more involved in Conor's past than she realizes.
Acting
Taylor-Joy's eyes do the entire backstory's heavy lifting.
Writing
Economic dialogue where every word carries generational weight.
Director
Beau Ferris
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in 2016, this predates Taylor-Joy's Queen's Gambit fame — one of her last pre-stardom indie projects before she became everyone's favorite wide-eyed chaos agent.
The title references a South Armagh village known as the most militarized area in Northern Ireland during The Troubles — the film's entire moral architecture rests on viewers grasping that specific geography of contested memory.