Haiti Bride is a 2014 Caribbean arthouse film written, produced and directed by Trinidadian filmmaker Robert Yao Ramesar.
Upon her arrival to the ruins of the cathedral where the wedding was held, she discovers three fragments of stained glass (colored red, blue and yellow) at the altar where Marie and Paul stood one year ago.
The turbulence experienced during the flight back to Haiti reminds Marie of the earthquake, and as a result, she contacts Paul upon her arrival, requesting that they meet in Cap-Haïtien (where initially they had planned to spend their honeymoon) instead of Port-au-Prince.
After an unsuccessful attempt at recollecting his memories at the Port-au-Prince cathedral, Paul is transported to the commune of Jacmel on his friend's motorcycle.
In Jacmel, three weeks prior to his reunion with Marie, Paul spends time with his lover and fiancée Natasha (Ketia Lerine).
During his stay in Jacmel, he receives a still camera from Natasha's father, an elderly Vodún painter (Pariza Domond), which he eventually uses to take pictures of the city.
The first screen tests, writing and pre-production took place on campus at a time when the University housed a number of to Haitian students whose education had been disrupted by the 2010 earthquake.