Curses, ghosts and time travel can all feel very similar laid out on screen. What might be a story set in the present but through an object, place or person, the present soon becomes the past, with ghosts from present now haunting the place. This may seem disjointed but that’s to be expected with a Mark Jenkin’s film. Returning to BFI with his third feature, Rose of Nevada is a slightly different tale than his previous (Bait, Enys Men). Those themes of the past and the present colliding are still the backbone of the story, Rose of Nevada takes the idea of time travel and turns it into a haunting story of grief, resilience and what feels like most definitely a curse.
After it had been missing for 30 years, the fishing boat, Rose of Nevada appears in the harbour of a run-down fishing village in Cornwall. The boat sets out again, this time with two new crew members, but when it returns to harbour once more, the crew members are welcomed back as those who went missing as it is now, 30 years ago.
Full review over at Filmhounds