Scottish student's film selected for Cannes festival
Rory Alexander Stewart, 27, said he was astonished to discover that his 26-minute film, Wild Horses, was one of 16 films picked from 2,600 entries for the festival’s Cinéfondation category, which is devoted to emerging talent.
Mr Stewart, from Leith, only left the National Film and Television School (NFTS) in Buckinghamshire a few weeks ago, after a two-year master’s degree course in directing fiction.
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Hide AdWild Horses, which he wrote and directed, is about a teenage girl who has chronic fatigue syndrome, also known as myalgic encephalopathy (ME).
Housebound by the ondition, and struggling with her over-protective mother, she runs away from home, searching for a horse and trying to establish her independence.
Mr Stewart said he thought there has been a mistake when he found out he would be mingling with Hollywood stars at the A-list festival.
He said: “I was very surprised, it’s unbelievable to be honest. It’s only really hitting me now.
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Hide Ad“I’m pretty amazed. Cannes is Cannes. You think there must have been a mistake. I think you have to wear a tuxedo so I suppose I will need to rent one soon.”
Mr Stewart said the inspiration for his film had come from a close friend who suffers from ME.
He said: “The film is about a girl with ME who has a fraught relationship with her mother and runs away to find a horse. I have a very close friend who has ME, an illness that can be very destructive both physically and mentally, so that was the seed.”
Wild Horses was made by a group of graduating NFTS students and stars the professional actors Emma Curtis and Emma Cater.
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Hide AdMr Stewart, whose mother is a neonatal nurse and whose father was a fireman, said he had wanted to be a filmmaker for as long as he could remember.
He added: “When I was about ten, I stole some VHS copies of Metropolis and Reservoir Dogs from my uncle and then fell in love with cinema indiscriminately.”
He is now developing a feature script based on his previous short film “about a murder detective who is extremely ineffective”.
The NFTS is headed by Nik Powell, whose own films include the Oscar-winning The Crying Game.
Mr Powell said: “It’s an emotional film.”