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Sacred Beast

Showtime
Premiere Type
Premiere Type
World Premiere
Category
Film Category
Student Short
Runtime
Run Time
17 minutes
Country
Country
United Kingdom
Directed by
Directed by
Link Kraft
Produced by
Produced By
Link Kraft and Aidan Milburn
Written by
Written by
Link Kraft and Tejas Eswing
Main Cast
Main Cast
Dominic Carrington - The Hunter
Freddy Sawyer - Jean Chastel
Kim Hicks - The Beast / Whispers of the Forest
Synopsis
1764, France, a mysterious beast is brutalizing a rural village in the dark forests of Gévaudan, killing hundreds in ways never before seen. The king sent many hunters to slay the beast, but all failed. An aristocratic Parisian hunter is hired by the villagers as a last resort. But, these woods see through him. He is tried and tested on his journey, his perceptions of reality shaken, and it seems he is not the only hunter wandering this primeval forest. As he delves deeper, the truth rears its ugly head and he questions all he is. What must become of him in order to return to the outside world.
Meet the Filmmaker
Meet the Filmmaker

Link

Kraft

Writer/Director, Cinematographer, Camera Department

I am Link Kraft and I am a director, writer, and cinematographer who has a passion for telling highly visual stories. My first love of film came from practical effects, watching films like ‘Alien’ and ‘The Dark Crystal’ and being in awe of how they achieved the monsters....Read more

I am Link Kraft and I am a director, writer, and cinematographer who has a passion for telling highly visual stories. My first love of film came from practical effects, watching films like ‘Alien’ and ‘The Dark Crystal’ and being in awe of how they achieved the monsters. It was magical and felt like getting to work on building other worlds only in my imagination. This fascination over time eventually evolved into camera work. I was always working with cameras, first using them to make stop motion animations. I started watching films with a more critical eye, and found I was almost always looking at how they achieved something visually. I would see a shot I liked and would try to figure out how they achieved that, what lens they used, what filter, how the lights were positioned. Films felt less like something made from magic, and more like something humans made that I could learn to do myself. I was particularly inspired by films that felt like windows into another world, fantasy, sci fi, and period settings. How everything was constructed yet it didn’t feel fake but genuine, even when the story was fantastical.

I take massive pleasure in working with a crew and collaborating with each discipline to create a shared vision. I always look forward to the next film and to be taken on the journey that each one uniquely gives, to learn new lessons from the different challenges they provide in order to grow and become a better director.

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