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Enterprise

Funding boost for Cornish film company making follow-up to BAFTA winning Bait

Penzance-based Bosena set to grow after receiving loan from Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Investment Fund

Filming Enys Men at Geevor Tin Mine. Director Mark Jenkin, secured by James Arscott and David Greeves, with assistant director Callum Mitchell taking notes and producer Denzil Monk

A Cornish independent film production company making the follow-up to BAFTA winning drama Bait has received a loan that will enable it to expand and recruit staff.

Penzance company Bosena is shooting the “ecosophical horror” Enys Men in the duchy after the production was delayed by the Covid pandemic.

The firm has now received £40,000 from the Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Investment Fund (CIOSIF) and will also use it to support its sustainability-focused, ethical and environmentally positive principles and ways of working, and take on two staff members.


What else has CIOSIF invested in?

Bosena is focused on supporting and promoting Cornish and other under-represented talent within the media sector, while delivering each project in an “ecological harmony” manner. The company does this by creating jobs across the creative industries, building upon a commitment to making creatively and critically successful films which also follow the Bosena “stepping lightly” regenerative principles of production.

The company is working on projects across film, TV, and animation including niche Cornish language productions and these projects will be delivered across media channels including theatrical distribution, broadcasting, digital streaming and mobile.

The company’s latest feature is Enys Men, by BAFTA winning writer-director Mark Jenkin and produced by Bosena chief executive Denzil Monk.

The “ecosophical horror” is set in the Cornish landscape and is the follow up to 2019’s BAIT, the highly acclaimed, award-winning drama which focused on issues surrounding the gentrification of a Cornish fishing village.

Mr Monk said: “We are committed to showcasing the wealth of production talent that Cornwall has to offer by producing critically celebrated and commercially successful features. Acting local, whilst thinking global is vitally important to us as we’re proud of our roots, which is why we are always keen to make work which uses and celebrates our Cornish language and culture, and why finding and continually employing Cornish talent is a cornerstone of our ecosophical objectives.