Project Detail

Pay and Display

Synopsis

Interweaving stories inside a multi-storey car park.

Details

Year
2006
Type of project
Shorts
Running time
12 mins
Format
Video
Director
Jules Bishop
Producer
The London Film School
Co-Producer
The London Film School
Editor
Myles Payne
Screenwriter
Jules Bishop
Director of Photography
Patrick Jackson
Sound
Cassie Destino
Composer
Matthew Rozeik
Principal cast
Matthew Bishop, Rory James Dunlop, Gabriella Kelly, Louise Dumayne, Joe Simms, Jessie Harris

Genre

Categories

Production Status

Production Company

The London Film School

24 Shelton Street
London WC2H 9UB
UK

T+44 (0)20 7836 9642

www.lfs.org.uk

Sales Company

The London Film School

24 Shelton Street
London WC2H 9UB
UK

T+44 (0)20 7240 0160

c.bright@lfs.org.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.

Borrowed Time Borrowed Time

Director: Jules Bishop

Year: 2012

Kevin, an inept young would-be criminal, needs money fast to pay back the local crime lord, a sword-wielding sociopath. Breaking into the home of an eccentric recluse seems to Kevin a likely plan, until the enraged old man unexpectedly shows up with a gun. The strange bond that forms between these two misfits becomes the premise of this unusual comedy-drama.

Sunshine Sunshine

Director: Jules Bishop

Year: 2004

Set on the day of the solar eclipse. A young boy returns home to a less compassionate reception from his father, while a woman struggles to see her daughter.

Galicia! 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.