Motion Control
Synopsis
Details
- Year
- 2003
- Type of project
- Shorts
- Running time
- 8 mins 32 secs
- Format
- Beta SP, DigiBeta
- Director
-
David Anderson
- Producer
- Rodney Wilson (Arts Council), Bob Lockyer (BBC)
- Editor
- Mark Richards
- Director of Photography
- Simon Richards
- Sound
- Billy Cowie
- Composer
- Billy Cowie
- Principal cast
- Liz Aggiss
- Choreography
- Liz Aggiss, Billy Cowie
Genre
Categories
Production Status
Production Company
Zed Production Company
32 Carnaby StreetLondon
UK
T +44 (0)20 7439 2255
andy@zedfilm.co.uk
Sales Company
Zed Production Company
32 Carnaby StreetLondon
UK
T +44 (0)20 7439 2255
andy@zedfilm.co.uk
Page updates
This page was last updated on 12th May 2025. 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.
Reflection
Director: David Anderson
Year: 2021
In a riverside café in Kent, a stranger cuts an odd figure. The cheerful but exhausted waitress Anne-Marie is barely holding it together when Freddie, her teenage son arrives suspiciously. The mystery deepens when the stranger seems to knows more about Anne-Marie and Freddie than anyone should know.
The Crossmaker
Director: David Anderson
Year: 2010
Jerusalem, 1st century AD. Jewish carpenter Shimon is enslaved to make crosses for the Roman army which his fellow Jews will be crucified on. When an injured young rebel seeks a hiding place in his workshop, Shimon's conscience and loyalties are called into question, as he must decide whether to protect his family and accept the hold that the Romans have over him, or stand-up and try to change his situation.
Galicia!
Director: Anna Maguire, Kyle Greenberg
Year: 2026
What if you went on a holiday and the apocalypse happened? GALICIA! is a found-footage, hybrid-documentary following a couple through home video footage as they visit their friends at a winery in rural Spain and inadvertently capture the end of days. We live in a time where the sense of our impending mutually assured destruction is more real than it’s ever been. GALICIA! Takes the form of a holiday video - a document of a couple before - and after the great cataclysm. The film starts as something that feels unedited - an accidental video diary of an ordinary couple that feels somewhat ghostly as much as it is also pedestrian. As the film evolves and degrades, we are led to question the fragility of humanity, as well as its power to endure.