Dive + The North Channel Swim
This special Sunday morning double bill brings together two striking films connected by water, endurance, and the quiet moments where inner and outer worlds collide.
Dive directed by Amy-Joyce Hastings, winner of Best Short Film at the Waterford International Film Festival. Set on the Irish coast, the film follows Jess, who slips away from a family gathering following her mother’s death and finds herself drawn toward the Atlantic. As she stands atop a weathered diving tower, fragments of memory surface — childhood fears, failed pregnancies, grief, and the complicated beauty of motherhood. Told through sensory detail and inner voice, Dive is a lyrical meditation on how the body holds trauma and how transformation can begin with a single, defiant act. Stillness gives way to motion as the film asks what it truly means to let go — and whether moving forward sometimes feels like falling.
Following this is The North Channel Swim, an intimate and inspiring documentary that shifts the focus from internal reckoning to extreme physical endurance. The film follows Hong Kong open-water swimmer Ryan Leung as he attempts one of the most unforgiving challenges in endurance swimming. Battling near-freezing waters, brutal currents and overwhelming isolation, Ryan is pushed beyond both physical and mental limits. What emerges is a deeply human portrait of resilience — not just a story of athletic achievement, but of persistence, vulnerability and the pursuit of something that may be impossible.
Together, these films form a moving and elemental double bill — one grounded in personal memory and emotional survival, the other in raw physical endurance — both shaped by the vast, indifferent power of the sea.
DIVE [ 9mins ], NORTH WATER SWIM [ Run Time TBC ]

