Echoes In The Flesh
During a single night inside an abandoned church, a wounded operative seeks sanctuary only to encounter entities that mirror human behaviour with terrifying accuracy. As voices, memories, and identities fracture, he is forced to confront a chilling truth: the threat is not an invasion, but something long buried within the human body itself. The horror lies not in being hunted—but in being replaced.
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Kieran MurrayDirector
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Kieran MurrayWriter
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Kyle MurrayKey Cast"Reyes"
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Frederic ZuzanKey Cast"Cole"
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Ivan KozirevKey Cast"Narrator"
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Genres:Thriller, Horror, Dystopian
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Runtime:7 minutes 49 seconds
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Completion Date:August 28, 2025
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Production Budget:450 GBP
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Country of Origin:United Kingdom
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Country of Filming:United Kingdom
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Language:English
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Shooting Format:Digital
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Aspect Ratio:2.39:1
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
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Digital Cinema Package:Unavailable
Distribution Information
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Deluce FilmsCountry: WorldwideRights: All Rights
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SecondSightDistributorCountry: WorldwideRights: All Rights
Kieran Murray is a filmmaker and director who studied at the Northern Film School at Leeds Beckett University. His work spans multiple genres, with a strong focus on horror and experimental filmmaking. He is particularly interested in atmosphere-driven storytelling, using visual composition, sound, and pacing to explore psychological tension and emotional unease. His approach prioritises mood and immersion, often favouring subtlety and restraint over explicit imagery.
Echoes in the Flesh reflects this creative direction, engaging with serious and unsettling themes while maintaining a measured and deliberate use of horror. The project showcases Kieran’s interest in collaboration and his ability to shape unsettling experiences through short-form filmmaking. Through his work, he continues to refine a distinctive voice rooted in tone, discomfort, and the exploration of darker emotional spaces.
Echoes in the Flesh was driven by an interest in identity under pressure and the idea that the most disturbing horrors are internal rather than imposed. I wanted the film to unfold in a confined space where safety and faith gradually lose their meaning. The abandoned church becomes a place of confrontation rather than sanctuary, reflecting the protagonist’s psychological collapse. The horror is intentionally intimate, built through closeness, silence, and moments where behaviour feels recognisably human yet subtly wrong. Rather than offering clear answers, the film focuses on uncertainty what happens when memory, belief, and the body itself can no longer be trusted.