Project Detail

6Till6

A man in formal dark clothing and a hat standing beside a black vehicle at night, raising his hand toward the camera on a busy city street lined with lit shop signs.

Synopsis

Two guys on a journey to keep the cameras rolling for 24 hours in East London with no plans of what, or who, they will capture.
What ensues is a film that is immediately caught in the tension of contradictions, the cities dizzying highs and bottomless lows immediately visible under the same microscope slide.
Displaying London’s unique brand of unbridled chaos, alongside the soul-crushing melancholy of the city, in a haunting, deeply affecting, and hilarious way.

Details

Year
2024
Type of project
Shorts
Running time
38 min 9 sec
Format
Digital
Director
Burnermunde
Producer
Oniqur Rahman
Editor
Arran Ashan, Mustafa Mahmoud
Sound
Stanley Banbury

Categories

Production Status

Production Company

Friends are Always Welcomed

Oniqur Rahman
63/66 Hatton Garden
Fifth Floor, Suite 23
London
EC1N 8LE

Page updates

This page was last updated on 9th February 2026. Please let us know if we need to make any amendments or request edit access by clicking below.

See also

You may also be interested in other relevant projects in the database.

Two hands hold a thread of wool during the process of weaving tartan The Weavers

Director: Callum McCulloch-Nowlan

Year: 2026

Rob Beaton has been weaving tartan and tweed in the Scottish Borders since he was 14. Now 84, he is Scotland's oldest and longest-serving mill worker, operating 100-year-old traditional shuttle looms. With no apprentice to carry on his craft, the mill where he has worked for over four decades may soon be forced to close. But elsewhere in Scotland, a different story is unfolding. At another mill in Highland Perthshire, a young apprentice is learning the trade, and the ancient rhythms of the looms are being passed to a new generation. Once, Scotland's textile industry employed nearly 75% of the population. Today, that figure stands at just 0.2%. Against the backdrop of that decline, the stories of these two mills paint a portrait of an industry at a crossroads. Through his film, Callum McCulloch-Nowlan celebrates the workers, machines, and spaces of Scotland's weaving tradition, while exploring the urgency of preserving a disappearing craft.

Over a background image of Edinburgh Castle the words Roseburn, path, tram and people are displayed Roseburn - Path | Tram | People

Director: Lee Arthur Patterson

Year: 2026

Edinburgh has a developed network of greenways. One key 60 year old route, The Roseburn Path, is under threat of being significantly transformed into a Tramway. The documentary explores the history, development, social and wellbeing benefits for residents of the path and contrasts the competing needs of development and connectivity.

The CN Tower viewed from a hotel window Two Pids

Director: John Smith

Year: 2026

After the world premiere of his film Being John Smith at the Toronto International Film Festival, an unexpected encounter in a hotel elevator leads the filmmaker to question the nature of reality.