Fateful Findings is not merely a film. It is a séance. A transmission from another dimension where dialogue, logic, and eye contact go to die. Breen plays Leopold , a celebrated author and researcher. Two years after a childhood pact with a mystical woman (long story), he has gained the ability to hack into any computer system simply by touching it—and then dramatically whispering “I need the secrets.”
If you’ve never heard of Neil Breen, imagine if a mysterious tech mogul with a god complex, zero formal film training, and an unlimited supply of turquoise button-down shirts decided to write, direct, produce, star in, edit, and score a movie about… everything. Government corruption. Pharmaceutical conspiracies. Magical laptops. And his own anguished, slow-motion sprint through a park. Fateful Findings - 2013 - Neil Breen
See it. Believe it. Don’t try to understand it. Fateful Findings is not merely a film
And in a strange way, he’s right.
Fateful Findings is the cinematic equivalent of finding a cryptic handwritten manifesto in a public library book. It is confusing, hilarious, unsettling, and unforgettable. Neil Breen is not a filmmaker. He is a force of nature. And this film is his undeniable, unhinged, utterly essential masterpiece. Breen plays Leopold , a celebrated author and researcher