Ok... my turn.
Born in Bethnal Green, London, moved down to Basingstoke when i was 3. Been here ever since.
I started making films from roughly the age of 6. My Dad used to show me his Cine films, but it was the one he called Fairies that caught my imagination. I persuaded my dad to buy some film and we made our own Stop Motion effort called 'Monsters on Earth' which starred my Star Wars figures.
From then on i was hooked, making around another 20 Silent Super8 Cine films with my friends and my Dad's Camera. The Cine era ended for me in 1986 when i made my first 400ft effort called 'Alien III' as a school project. My school then trusted me to borrow the their video camera. The video age was born.
It took me ages to get used to now having to write a script as well as a story... an issue i still suffer with to this day!
After a couple of year of using the School Camera, i then decided to buy my own. Obviously my pocket money couldn't stretch, so me and my Dad broke our piggy banks and bought our first video camera... the Sony CCD V7 8Afe... and it was a beauty.
So in the Summer of 1988 Fraught Productions was born, I also joined the IAC in the same year.
I made a high volume of films over the next 5-6 years, winning a number of Bronze & Silver Seal Awards at the IAC's London International Film & Video Festivals. I also contributed to the Youth column of Amateur Film & Video Maker.
I went on to study TV & Video production at Farnborough Tech College, and then went on to do some work for a Video company. It was great experience, but the industry was in a low at the time and i ended up being made redundant.
I worked in the RAF as a civilian Photographer for a short period (which fired my other hobby of Photography). I finally got an office job, just to keep my head above water... and thus began my office based meteoric rise to the wonderful world of IT via Farm & Asset Finance!
In 1996 i completed the film 'The Book of Joshua', which was a reasonably well received film, and it won a Silver Seal award. Sadly, and annoyingly, no film festival would show it. This kind of ended the Fraught Productions film machine... we were all dissolussioned and angry. My friends whom i made all the films with gave up and went their own ways.
I didn't make another Fraught Productions film until 2005. I bought myself a new MiniDV camera as well as some editing software for my PC. I began to re-edit some of my old films in the hope of improving them using the new power of the PC. I also edited the footage i had shot whilst trekking in Nepal, and turned it into the film 'Namaste'.
Since then, i've done a lot of re-editing of my old films. My favourite being the re-edit of Hellbent : A Hellraiser Chronicle, which has since been shown at a Film Festival in New York.
My last film Overtime has been a bit of a whirl wind, and has given me access to people i would never have met before. All i can say is Overtime 2 is going to be better than the first!

And that is where i'm at now.