Working across features, shorts and augmented reality projects.

Current slate

Gama Bomb: Survival of the Fastest

CURRENTLY IN FESTIVAL CIRCUIT

WHEN SEA SAVAGE hit the American Billboard charts, cult Irish thrash band Gama Bomb were trapped by lockdowns, missing a drummer, and unable to tour.

Survival Of The Fastest joins Domo Dixon, John ‘JR’ Roche, Joe McGuigan and Philly Byrne as they return to the UK and Europe on a quest to perform for 10,000 people at Hellfest, ‘The Glastonbury of Metal’.

‘WARM AND WAYWARD…
A JOYOUS CHAPTER IN THE STORY OF ULSTER PUNK.’

DOCS IRELAND

Kiran Acharya's warm and wayward documentary, made when the world of live music was in upheaval, has been celebrated as a joyful chapter in the story of Ulster punk, previously seen in John T Davis’ Shellshock Rock (1979) and Good Vibrations (2013).

Survival Of The Fastest takes us from the earliest glow of Northern Ireland’s Peace Process through Gama Bomb’s 20-year history to present-day Tokyo, Newry, London, Dublin, Belfast and beyond.

Filmed on tour, at home, and everywhere in between, Survival Of The Fastest incudes stops in Manchester, Leeds, Derry, Birmingham, Tilburg, Norwich, Emmen and Glasgow alongside a band of friends trying to keep the show on the road.

The Shapes Between Us (w/t)

IN DEVELOPMENT
 

THE SHAPES BETWEEN US explores  the fascinating cultural and historical context of the complex interplay between club culture, dance music, and a 30 year bloody sectarian conflict. 

This documentary is not just about the evolution of a music scene; it's a narrative that intertwines with the socio-political and economic landscape, offering a deeper understanding of the era's challenges and experiences of those who lived through it.

 Extensive hours of audio interviews, carefully edited to form this cohesive and truthful narrative forms the very bedrock of the film.

Shock Absorbers
(w/t)

IN DEVELOPMENT
 

How the women of Northern Ireland bear the brunt of economic and societal shocks.

From The Troubles to economic precarity - Haven’t women in NI struggled enough?
 

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