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  1. Aug 7, 2023 · Enys Men does not clearly adhere to the logic of time at all, as the radio announcement towards the beginning of the film mentions the death of the boatman to be on the 1st of May 1973, which is technically in the future at this time, for the protagonist mentions the current date in her record to be April of 1973.

  2. Jan 12, 2023 · Enys Men: The films that frighten us in unexplainable ways. Bait director Mark Jenkin's new film about a woman having visions on a Cornish island will haunt audiences like few others. It fits into ...

    • Adam Scovell
  3. Apr 7, 2023 · Filmed on 16MM, Enys Men is grainy, and effectively plays with color, highlighting Woodvine’s icy blue eyes and her red rain slicker, evocative of the one seen in Don’t Look Now (released in ...

  4. Oct 23, 2023 · Enys Men is a divisive and thought-provoking low-budget horror film that may not be for everyone, but if you appreciate its experimental oddity, it can grow on you like a nasty little fungus.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Enys_MenEnys Men - Wikipedia

    Enys Men. Enys Men (Cornish for 'Stone Island') is a 2022 British experimental psychological folk horror film shot, composed, written and directed by Mark Jenkin. Shot on 16 mm film, it stars Mary Woodvine, Edward Rowe, Flo Crowe and John Woodvine. The film was shot during the COVID-19 lockdown, and the crew prioritised creating a small carbon ...

  6. Jan 25, 2023 · There is some discussion as to Enys Men’s genre, as to whether it is folk horror. This is inconclusive, even to Jenkin. This is inconclusive, even to Jenkin. What is striking, though, is that with many of the audience fresh from a protest on Dartmoor earlier in the day, the film’s deep connection with the wild landscape of the far southwest feels significant and familiar.

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  8. www2.bfi.org.uk › whats-on › bfi-film-releasesEnys Men - BFI

    Enys Men is a mind-bending Cornish folk horror set in 1973 that unfolds on an uninhabited island off the Cornish coast. A wildlife volunteer’s (Mary Woodvine) daily observations of a rare flower take a dark turn into the strange and metaphysical, forcing both her and viewers to question what is real and what is nightmare.

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