NEW PROJECTS

3D - BIG SCREEN FILM PROJECT - CORAL REEF LIFE
Currently in development
TELEVISION SERIES - ENVIRONMENTAL GENRE

“Consequences of Climate Change in the Caribbean” (working title)
Production of an investigative TV-Series about the up-to-date impact of Global Warming and other Man-Made
Influences on Coral Reefs of Islands of the Southern and Eastern Caribbean, as seen and experienced by the
local people who live there.

"Beneath the Caribbean Sea” (working title)
An entertaining yet educational television series the entire family can enjoy. Each episode will feature marine
life in a specific area located in the Caribbean. This is to create a series that applies to the public on Caribbean
Islands but is also intended for international distribution.
“Oceans Discovery Kids Explore”
Kids are exploring the Ocean - An Informational and entertaining Television Series about amazing marine creatures,
where and how they live, presented and narrated by local kids – boy & girl (11-13 years old).
FEATURE DOCUMENTARY - TOBAGO 1677

TOBAGO 1677 - Magazine Article
TOBAGO 1677 will be filmed topside and underwater entirely in Quad-HD using the revolutionary RED Digital Cinema One Camera. The film explores this dramatic event in Caribbean history, an event that has never been told before. Now 333 years later an expert team of archaeologists, filmmakers and scientists must journey back to a time when European Nations fought with each other to dominate the “New World”. In a spectacular quest explorers and scientists will dive down to these sunken relics of our common maritime past to reveal this dramatic story to the world, a story about heroic men giving their lives to protect their loved ones and the soil they called their home – Tobago.
Courtesy 422 South, UK
Utilizing historical reenactments, high-end CGI animations, expert interviews, archival imagery, artifacts and state-of-the-art technologies, the film focuses on one of the most cruel and bloodiest sea battles ever fought by two European nations. The film also deals with the enormous wealth of artifacts – close to twenty battle ships from the mid 1600’s that lie covered by mud and sand in less than 60 feet in Scarborough Harbor. 
Courtesy 422 South, UK
These shipwrecks are windows into the world of Tobago’s past providing us with an insight about tales of conquest, hardship, and heroism, all told through the remnants of once mighty ships, a subject that continues to fascinate large audiences around the world.