Early career Before starting her career in the film industry as a producer, Wells helped run Digital Orchard, a company specializing in film, finishing images, developing film, and digital imaging. While enrolled at NYU, where she originally intended to be a producer, Wells wrote and directed three short films.
Tuesday (2015) Tuesday follows a 16-year-old girl who is learning to cope with a big loss, introducing the themes of fatherhood and personal trauma characteristic of Wells's films. The girl (Megan McGill) goes to her deceased father's residence and grieves her loss. The film presumably takes place in Scotland and reflects Wells's experience of her father's death when she was 16. The film earned Wells the Best Writer Nominee at BAFTA Scotland New Talent Awards 2016.
Laps (2016) Laps is a New York-based short film about a woman who is sexually assaulted on a crowded subway train. Like
Tuesday,
Laps explores a severe trauma and how life continues despite it. The handheld camera emphasizes the claustrophobic nature of the subway. The film features Thea Brooks, and earned Wells Special Jury Recognition at the SXSW Short Film Awards and Special Jury Award for Editing at
Sundance 2017. Blue Christmas (2017) The longest of Wells's three shorts,
Blue Christmas is a period piece about Alec, a Scottish debt collector in the late 1960s who goes to work on Christmas Eve instead of spending time with his wife and son, due in part to her worsening psychosis. It follows him around town as he subjects other families to displeasure at his presence and collects a television from one family. He eats dinner with one of the people he visits before going home late to see his wife trying to burn down the Christmas tree with a lit cigarette while his son tries to restrain her. The son sees Alec come in and is angry with him. Alec steps in to intervene, comforting his wife and talking her out of her episode. She drops the cigarette onto the tree as her body relaxes, burning up the tree and the rest of the room. The film's title is a reference to the song
Blue Christmas.
Elvis Presley's version is heard toward the end. The film features Jamie Robson and
Michelle Duncan.
Other work Wells was a fellow at the 2020
Sundance Institute Screenwriters and Directors Labs with her feature film debut
Aftersun, which premiered at the
2022 Cannes Film Festival to critical acclaim. She was also a producer on the 2019 film
Raf, which premiered at the
2019 Toronto International Film Festival.
Aftersun Aftersun is a coming-of-age film that tells the story of a young woman, Sophie, recalling a holiday she took with her father, Calum (
Paul Mescal), 20 years earlier, for Calum's 31st birthday. The 11-year-old Sophie (
Frankie Corio) does not spend much time with her father, but they have an annual vacation together. They go to a Turkish budget resort, and each wants to bond and connect with the other, but Calum struggles with depression, creating a barrier. Adult Sophie tries to remember her father by looking back on this holiday and piecing together her memories with the help of the videos they took on the vacation. The film is shot on
35mm film and partly by the actors themselves on a
MiniDV camera. This camera is used for many of the scenes with Sophie during the holiday, including playing with friends at the resort and spending time with her father. Wells's father died when she was 16 and she lived apart from him, though she did not feel that he was uninvolved with her upbringing.
Aftersun received 121 nominations, and 33 awards, including the British Independent Film Award for Best Director and Best Screenplay for Wells and a nomination for
Best Actor at the
2023 Academy Awards for Mescal. The
National Board of Review named the film the Best Directorial Debut of 2022. Wells also received the Bingham Ray Breakthrough Director Award at the Gotham Awards and the Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director, or Producer at the BAFTA Awards.
The Making of Aftersun In her final year at NYU, Wells began to conceptualize
Aftersun, working with her independent study professor on a premise for a film about a father and his preteen daughter on vacation. After watching a handful of films about fathers and daughters with her professor, Wells took a solo trip to Cyprus, where she spent about two weeks observing the place and attempting to write the script. She called the trip a "self-imposed writing retreat", where she immersed herself in the place that became the film's setting. The two pages she returned home with were the only two pages of the project she had for the next two years. These two pages outlined each day of the characters' vacation, the physical actions that became an illustration of their relationships with each other and themselves, their emotions, and their development. Most of the plot develops through the distance between these actions and the characters' emotions of the actors, making it difficult to show in a script. For the first two years, Wells held most of the plot in her head. She then came up with an index card system to depict her thought process and the film's direction. The rave sequences in the film were not present in the first draft. They originated as a spark of inspiration from editor and film school peer Blair McClendon's short film ''I'm the One Who's Singing''. The film took Wells about eight years to write, with most of that time spent on world-building and "laying the foundations". The actual writing of the script happened very quickly, after which Wells spent six months attempting to redraft it, which she described as "just moving around commas". She then sent the draft to a producer who got on board with the project and made some fairly significant rewrites.
Post-Aftersun In February 2024, Wells directed her first advertisement, a video for
Quaker Oats titled "You've Got This". It follows the relationship of a father and son across time, Quaker Oats connects them all through the stages of life. Wells has said that familial relationships and the passage of time are front of mind when she writes, as evidenced by the commercial and her other work. In July 2024, Wells directed advertisements for the
American Red Cross titled "What's Your Type?" and "Growing Up". The first was created with the goal of relatability and encouraging people to donate blood. After beginning with upbeat music and ordinary lighting, the commercial takes a quick turn to a hospital, where the cast is injured and sickly, in need of blood donations to save their lives. The video is a departure from Wells's previous work both thematically and stylistically, but maintains some of her visual style, featuring collaborators from the club scenes in
Aftersun. Wells served as the Jury President of the Bright Horizons competition at the 2025
Melbourne International Film Festival, where
Aftersun debuted in Australia in 2022 as part of the same competition in its first year.
Simón Mesa Soto's A Poet won the award and its $140,000 prize. Wells also led the jury for the Luigi De Laurentiis debut film award at the
82nd Venice International Film Festival, where Nastia Korkia's
Short Summer won. == Style and themes ==