Diamond
Set inside a brutalist museum after hours, three teenagers attempt a high-risk heist. Rendered in stark black-and-white noir, the film reframes theft not as crime, but as confrontation — a collision between institutional value and personal meaning. What makes something valuable? Scarcity? Protection? Naming? Or the simple act of deciding it matters? As walls protect what is deemed “priceless,” the film explores how value is constructed, who controls it, and how ownership reshapes belonging. In the dark, value becomes unstable. And sometimes what seems small holds everything that was missing.
Fun Facts of Movie
Directed by Bosco Shane (HU). AI Used. 4min 12sec
Bosco Shane is a director, writer and artist born in Budapest and based in London. Influenced by Eastern European block housing estates, brutalist architecture, film noir, and surrealism, Bosco’s works explore emotion, belonging, loss, and memory through stark visual compositions and philosophical undertones. Concrete environments often become psychological landscapes, where space reflects inner tension.
Director Statement
This film explores the idea of value — who defines it, who protects it, what it truly means, and who dares to take it or defend it.
Set within a surreal brutalist landscape and framed through film noir aesthetics, the story follows three teenagers whose heist becomes more than an act of theft. The heist is not only about possession, but about recognition. About what we are told matters — and what we instinctively feel does.
Through tension, motion, and surreal undertones, the film questions whether something matters because of its price — or because of the emotional weight we assign to it. In the end, the story asks a quiet but urgent question: what truly holds worth?








There are no reviews yet.