HEMEL by DANIELLE DEAN

Produced by Lono Studio

Filmed in 16mm with an ensemble of non-actors and family, Danielle Dean’s new film is a portrait of Hemel Hempstead, where she was raised, and unfolds as a personal essay on the town’s history as a planned community under the New Towns Act.

Drawing from archival records and materials like film and advertising, British-American artist Danielle Dean produces bold environments to ground and enliven her research-based projects. Her multidisciplinary practice examines historical representations and contemporary conditions of labour, racialized identity, and popular culture through projects that are often produced collaboratively with community members whose experiences bring crucial perspective to the work.

Commissioned for her solo exhibition Out of this World, Dean’s new film is a portrait of Hemel Hempstead, where she was raised and unfolds as a personal essay on the town’s history as a planned community under the New Towns Act of 1946. Titled Hemel, the work’s central reference is a 1957 sci-fi horror B-movie shot in town about the arrival of a non-human entity that infiltrates the minds of residents and endangers life with a toxic black slime. Playing a composite character based on herself and the movie’s detective protagonist, Dean’s extraordinary vantage brings together real and imagined worlds, both past and present.

Filming in 16mm with an ensemble of non-actors and family, Hemel blurs fiction and documentary to expand a critical reading of the colonial overtones in the original movie, while recasting its visual language to consider the race, class, and labour dynamics of a small English town in the post-Brexit context. As she excavates recent events, historical archives, and personal histories that have transformed Hemel Hempstead, an encroaching dark flood, a growing shadow, a rising plume of smoke build layers of mystery throughout the work. Rows of identical housing, uniformed workers, and emptied lots signal an eerie tone within the mundane, drawing connections between the post-war ideals of the development corporation that established the town, and the mega-corporations shaping life and industry today.

 

Hemel (2024) is co-commissioned by Mercer Union, Toronto; Spike Island, Bristol; and The Vega Foundation. The film is produced by LONO Studio and made possible with the generous support of Patrick Collins, Jill and Peter Kraus, Patrick and Daniela Schmitz Morkramer, and an Anonymous Donor.

 

Director: Danielle Dean
Producer: Luke W. Moody
Associate Producer: Caroline Smith
Cinematographer: Alberto Balázs
Focus Puller: Karl Hui
Loader/2AC: Agnieszka Kocinska
Gaffer: Al Rice
Colorist: Alberto Balázs
Cast: Danielle Dean as Quatermass, Audrey Dean, Dave Marchant as Barman, Brendon Laing, Brian Dean, Collum Dean, Chielota Aneto, Chibuikem Aneto, Clive Brooks as Man on Street, Harvey Taylor, band ‘Owes’, School pupil Godson Leboko, School pupil Sharon Brobbery, School pupil Jada Coke, School pupil David Owusu Ansah, Stanley Aneto, Theresa Ross as Lady with Handkerchief.

 
 

Shot on Kodak Tri-X, Double X, Ektachrome, Vision 3 200T and 500T.

Camera Equipment by: Four Corners and Shootblue.

Labs: Cinelab and Gauge Film

DCP: Kino Sound Studio Lisbon