Intensive care film made at Rosie Hospital in Cambridge wins national award for Anglia Ruskin University film-maker
The Golden Window, filmed at the Rosie Hospital in Cambridge, has won an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) prize.
A filmmaker from Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) has won a national award for the best film on the topic of mental health or wellbeing.
Dr Shreepali Patel received the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Research in Film award for The Golden Window, which combines complex science with a strong emotional theme.
Produced in collaboration with Professor Topun Austin, consultant neonatologist at the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at the Rosie Hospital in Cambridge, the film focuses on a newborn baby who had been starved of oxygen following complications at birth.
The ‘golden window’ refers to the crucial 72-hour period after birth where cooling the baby by three degrees Celsius can minimise long-term brain injury.
The Golden Window, which was filmed in 2012, follows the progress of Baby J over 72 hours using innovative film and soundtrack to capture the experience from the baby’s perspective.
Including interviews with parents and staff, the 22-minute film captures the emotional journey of having a sick newborn infant at the NICU.
In the seven years since the film was made, Baby J has made remarkable progress - as have the other children of parents who were filmed at the time.
Dr Patel, the BAFTA-award winning director of ARU’s StoryLab research institute, said: “The Golden Window was a wonderful co-creation built on the incredible trust of Topun and his team, and the unbelievable generosity of the parents and carers of these fragile lives within the emotional space of the NICU ‘bubble’.
“The film’s creative talent fused Tim Sidell’s incisive and emotive cinematography with Tim Henbury’s haunting soundscape, and the sheer creative energy of graduate students Adam Broder, Claire Unsworth and Reeta Varparma.”
Professor Austin, consultant neonatologist at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said: “The Golden Window pushes the boundaries of communication through film, conveying feelings and emotions that capture the intensity and uncertainty of having a critically ill baby on intensive care.
“At the same time, it provided a unique platform to convey complex scientific information in a novel and engaging way.
“This was a true collaborative effort between very different worlds and the talent and vision of Shreepali and her team is clear to anyone who has seen the film.”
The Golden Window, which has been shown at documentary film festivals and displayed as a multi-screen film in digital galleries, was co-produced with ARU’s Sophie Jackson.
In addition to the Research in Film award, Dr Patel also received £2,000 from AHRC towards future filmmaking projects.
The judging panel for the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Research in Film Awards 2019 was chaired by Jan Dalley, arts editor of the Financial Times, and also included Sir Peter Bazalgette, chairman of ITV, and Steve Harding-HiIl, creative director in commercials and short-form at Aardman Animations.
The awards ceremony took place at the British Film Institute in London.
The full film can be seen online.