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Learn more- Hungry Angel (2017) is a film about our tendency to make assumptions. Trapped in our own subjective experiences, we are unable to accurately understand each other without projecting our own preconceived ideas. Set separately across India and England, the audience is tempted to make assumptions about the characters and their motives. . What we may see as the truth is framed by these conjectures, but will they play out as we expect? This story concerns a tragic death that occurs in a small family in North London- The Hunters. By intertwining past memories of childhood, troubled reunions, and ominous scenes of intrigue, the film presents the audience with a cloudy snapshot of how this death has turned the family's reality upside down. We are given an insight into the fallout of a tragic family death. Abigail Hunter (Venetia Menzies), an independent young woman, travels to an Indian ashram to recuperate after the mysterious death of her mother Suzanne Hunter( Louisa Clein) Upon return, she visits her grandfather Jacob (Ken Drew), and tells him about a revelation she had in India after she formed a close relationship with a guru- her mother is still alive! Struggling to process the passing of his daughter, Jacob is taken aback by his grand daughter's apparent state of delusion when she arrives at his North London house to share the news. Mrs Cranberry (Pam Peck), a neighbour, sees Abi arrive dressed in traditional Indian clothing, and barely recognises her. After hearing footsteps inside the house, Abi begins to question her state of mind. Unable to talk sense into her, Jacob storms out of the house to go for a walk and comes across Mrs C. The audience assumes she will speak ill of Abi, but actually she attempts to defend her and console Jacob. As the narrative unfolds, it reveals the pre-existing conflicts, complications and mysteries that trouble this family. Unable to identify the missing jigsaw pieces of this puzzle, the audience is invited to abandon any assumptions or preconceptions about a possible back-story to the events shown, and must resign themselves to remaining at the mercy of what these short scenes decide to reveal. At the center of this mystery is an insatiable presence, something from a world long forgotten, which acts as an invisible architect, playing with the characters' fates, always hungry for something.
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