Bruce founded Muscle Films with Michael Coulson a film and television company, producing offbeat programming for British TV and cinema and part of a new wave of graphic artists and punk filmmakers in London. Bruce and Coulson created paintings as the starting point for their films and later developed scripts from the images. Bruce also founded a design company Kruddart with Michael Coulson, producing anarchic, collage-based material for publishers
Faber and Faber and
New Scientist as well as working with many leading British film directors including
Peter Greenaway,
John Boorman,
Neil Jordan 1984 film-maker
Neil Jordan worked for several weeks in pre-production with artist filmmakers Nichola Bruce and Michael Coulson to create hundreds of detailed storyboard drawings for the feature
The Company of Wolves. The film's visuals were of particular importance, as Jordan explains:
The visual design was an integral part of the script. It was written and imagined with a heightened sense of reality in mind. Bruce's 1985 short horror/drama
Wings of Death (BFI) which she co-directed with Mike Coulson, featuring
Dexter Fletcher and
Kate Hardie, explored addiction. It was reviewed in
Monthly Film Bulletin in 1986 by
Mark Finch who described the film as "...certainly a curiosity--a modern morality tale, too long to be a commercial, too short to be a feature, but with a surer visual sense than many recent British films." with
Laurie Andersen and the music video
The Blood of Eden for
Peter Gabriel ''Britain's Club X (
Channel 4)'' was co-created by Nichola Bruce and Michael Coulson. Her documentary feature
The Monument on the artist
Rachel Whiteread and the difficulties she faced to create the Holocaust memorial in Vienna provided an insight into the challenges that face artists making public works. Bruce's first feature film
I Could Read the Sky (2000) featuring
Dermot Healy,
Maria Doyle-Kennedy,
Brendan Coyle and
Stephen Rea was inspired by the photographic novel by writer Timothy O'Grady and photographer
Steve Pyke. It focuses on the losses and memories of an old Irishman who spent most of his life working in England. The film has been described as "innovative, melancholic, and deeply moving film is a small gem, as much informed by literature as it is by cinema." In Jill Nelmes and Jule Selbo's book
Women Screenwriters: An International Guide (2015) it is explained that "Because the film is an adaptation of a photographic novel, rather than a filmed version of its original source, Bruce creates the events in layers of images that tell the story." The music for the film was composed by Irish sean nós singer and member of Afro Celt Sound System,
Iarla Ó Lionáird.
Sinéad O'Connor,
Noel Hill and
Liam O'Maonlai also contributed to the soundtrack which was released by
Real World Records. Bruce was awarded a
NESTA Fellowship in 2003 to study
perception and was mentored by
Richard Gregory (CBE) resulting in
Strangeness of Seeing a body of work including a series of 26 films developed over a period of four years in collaboration with film maker Rebecca E Marshall. Bruce's 2010 film about the
Apollo Moon landings,
Moonbug, won the Special Jury Remi Award for Theatrical Feature Documentary at the 2011 Houston International Film Festival.
Moonbug is both a photographic road trip and an exploration of how photographs become signpost for history as it documents photographer
Steve Pyke as he sets out on a journey across America in his search to meet and photograph the Apollo space pioneers. The pair also collaborated on a touring exhibition of Steve Pyke's Apollo portraits and space artefacts alongside a 3 Channel Triptych of the
Moonbug film called
Man On The Moon. Musician
Matt Johnson produced the soundtrack for
Moonbug having previously worked with Bruce on her documentary
One Man Show: Dramatic Art of Steven Berkoff in (1995). Her award-winning feature documentary Axis of Light (2011) co-directed and produced with
Pia Getty is a poignant and absorbing observation of the influences of conflict seen through the work of eight leading artists –
Etel Adnan,
Jananne Al–Ani,
Ayman Baalbaki,
Mona Hatoum,
Rachid Koraïchi,
Youssef Nabil,
Shirin Neshat, Mona Saudi. == Filmography ==