Steven Sheil
@scsheil.bsky.social
1.3K followers 1.2K following 2.6K posts
Screenwriter and director: 'Mum & Dad', 'Dead Mine'. Writer of dark fiction. Co-Director of Mayhem Film Festival. Nottingham, UK. https://linktr.ee/StevenSheil
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scsheil.bsky.social
I've put together a list of links of where to buy, rent, watch or read my work. It's all here: linktr.ee/StevenSheil
scsheil.bsky.social
I have a few of these Dover editions and I really like their commitment to quality - “This is a permanent book”
A photo of the back of the book “A DOVER EDITION DESIGNED FOR YEARS OF USE!
We have made every effort to make this the best book possible. Our paper is opaque, with minimal show-through; it will not discolor or become brittle with age. Pages are sewn in signatures, in the method traditionally used for the best books, and will not drop out, as often happens with paperbacks held together with glue. Books open flat for easy reference. The binding will not crack or split. This is a permanent book.”
scsheil.bsky.social
No that’s new to me - a good one though!
scsheil.bsky.social
100%. Could only have been more English if he was eating a curry/kebab/Greggs at the time.
scsheil.bsky.social
Not on tiktok so only just learning of the Goose King of Nottingham, who has been climbing and riding the giant Goose Fair goose on the Mansfield Road roundabout and draping it with England flags, but fell off a few days ago, landing head first, breaking multiple bones and ending up in hospital.
scsheil.bsky.social
Didn't realise you were in Sitges - have a great time!
Reposted by Steven Sheil
Reposted by Steven Sheil
regretteruane.bsky.social
They’re just so good, little bit dada, little bit pop, all creep and spook, divine
A book page with a collage of black and white painted bats surrounding a black and white photo of two smartly dressed white men, against a purple painted background A book page with a collage of black and white painted witches with skulls for faces and a photo of a clown in harlequin costume, against a spattering purple painted background
Reposted by Steven Sheil
regretteruane.bsky.social
Every single one of the illustrations is a brilliant brooding exercise in evoking dread & doom.
I’d never seen his art before I picked up this book, but after an Earl E. Mayan internet odyssey I’m completely smitten
A collage painting with black and white cut out photos of human faces and a snarling Alsatian dog surrounding a white painted sheet ghost, all against a black and purple background made of paint drips suggesting a spooky wood, above which door shapes are scratched in black ink A collage painting in which a phot of two white men, one standing wearing a cowboy hat and crumpled shirt and trousers, the other squatting wearing preppy clothes and a sailor hat, are surrounded by an ominous purple painted background, above them a black and white painted skull, to their left a black white and grey painted area which is fairly abstract but suggests tv static intermixed with shadowy branches
Reposted by Steven Sheil
scsheil.bsky.social
I've written a new Adrian Chills story (short horror stories inspired by the Guardian columns of Adrian Chiles).

This one's called 'Priscilla'

bsky.app/profile/adri...
Reposted by Steven Sheil
scsheil.bsky.social
It's great on the big screen - that dreamlike atmosphere really works.
Reposted by Steven Sheil
theoscargoff.bsky.social
Legitimately incredible film. Think Maya Deren disguised as Ed Wood.
mutualimsure.bsky.social
Dementia (1955) is a dialogueless fever dream film about a woman's nightmare experience on a single night in LA. Made a decade too early to be a hit, it's a mix of German expressionism and American noir and closer to 60s films like Carnival of Souls and Polanski's Repulsion. It's worth an hour of
scsheil.bsky.social
Fantastic film. We put on a screening of it about ten years ago at @mayhemfilmfestival.bsky.social with a specially composed new soundtrack by a local rock/electronic band called 8mm Orchestra. It was incredible.
A shot of a cinema screen with the title 'Dementia'. A silhouette of a guitarist is standing in front of it.
scsheil.bsky.social
No-one seems to be trying to make AI Succession, or Normal People or Sex Education, because that would mean working on writing and concentrating on character and trying to make something that makes people feel something more than just 'wow that was cool' or 'what a spectacle'.
scsheil.bsky.social
AI can't yet handle face to face conversations between people with any degree of conviction or consistency, so despite what people claim, it's nowhere near replacing Hollywood or Netflix, at least at the moment. But there doesn't seem to be such a push to create human dramas with AI.
scsheil.bsky.social
From what I've seen, a significant amount of AI filmmakers want to create something looks like a $100 million sci-fi blockbuster, and AI can - at least in terms of random screenshots - do that for them, so there is a kind of egalitarianism there, but it's such a narrow aim.
scsheil.bsky.social
Had a look at some of the films featured previously at this festival plus some other AI-produced shorts to see if this aim of 'HBO-level' film was accurate, and at a basic level AI can't yet even create a convincing 1 minute scene of 2 people talking in a room without them regenerating in every shot
A shot from an AI produced short. 8 screenshots show a supposed continuous conversation between two people. On the left a woman in black sci-fi armour, with her hair tied back, on the right a man in a black polo neck. They are in a grey and black room. Every shot of the woman shows a different face and so does every shot of the man.
scsheil.bsky.social
I've written a new Adrian Chills story (short horror stories inspired by the Guardian columns of Adrian Chiles).

This one's called 'Priscilla'

bsky.app/profile/adri...
scsheil.bsky.social
Considering that I've never yet seen an AI short film that could convincingly portray even a one minute scene of two humans talking in a room, this seems like it would be an impossibly high bar.
A screengrab from the article. It reads "The benchmark for selection? 'Whether a film could plausibly be screened on mainstream platforms like Netflix or HBO,' Rice says"
Reposted by Steven Sheil
scumbelievable.bsky.social
I reviewed DEAD MAIL, a frankly astounding little thriller about loneliness, music, analog systems, and the exploitation of Black musicians by their white managers and collaborators.

www.patreon.com/posts/140799...