Morgan Williams and Nikta Faraz Moeinfaraz, both MA Film Production students, joined forces to produce The Snakebite Anthology – a pair of short films with interwoven themes of addiction, trauma, and redemption. What makes the project even more impressive is how it seamlessly integrates sustainability into both the storytelling and the production process.
The anthology consists of The Cobra Effect, written and directed by Morgan, and The Birth of the Rattlesnake, led by Nikta. Both films explore the consequences of alcoholism, each told through a distinct lens but connected by overlapping characters and settings.
Morgan’s film follows a man quietly battling addiction while trying to reconnect with his estranged daughters, while Nikta’s film depicts a woman who kills someone while drink-driving and is forced to face both the external and internal fallout. Despite beginning with separate ideas, the two students realised the themes aligned. “It just made sense to bring them together,” says Nikta. “Everything fit naturally. We hardly had to change the scripts.”
Both students were introduced to BAFTA albert through their MA course, and for Nikta – who came to the UK from Iran – it was eye-opening. “I didn’t know anything about albert before arriving. Back home, these conversations just aren’t happening,” she says. “Now, I can’t imagine making a film without thinking about the environmental impact.”
Together, they committed to embedding sustainable practices throughout the production – not just as a learning exercise, but as a personal responsibility.