Amy Hardie graduated from the National Film and Television School with the BP Expo prize for best student documentary (Kafi’s Story). After making 12 prime time television documentaries for BBC and Channel 4, her debut feature The Edge of Dreaming opened at IDFA, followed by a science feature, Stem Cell Revolutions, the innovative Seven Songs for a Long Life (2015), and Love & Trouble, which had its world premiere in Berlin Documentale in 2024. It is currently being distributed by Dartmouth and JourneyMan for international sales. Her films have won 13 awards, translated into 14 languages, have screened in 16 countries including on PBS in the US, Arte in Europe, VPRO in the Netherlands, BBC and Channel 4 in UK. She is known for her work with NGOs and charities on impact, designing post-screening workshops that ran across 8 countries for The Edge of Dreaming, receiving the Tam Dalyell medal for public engagement with science for Stem Cell Revolutions, and international acclaim for the documentary in song Seven Songs for A Long Life which changed the law (South Korea) and best practice in hospice care in US.