David Firth is a uniquely-talented UK film maker and animator with a plethora of comedic characters and short films behind him. Arguably his best recognized character is Salad Fingers - a lonely green lizard man who lives in a bleak landscape haunted by his own imagination. The Salad Fingers series of animations has attracted over 50m web views over the past five years and has a cult following around the world, especially among the 15 -25 demographic. David's weird and wonderful world of the bizarre and eccentric includes characters such as Burnt Face Man, Spoilsbury Toast Boy, Jerry Jackson, and his live action creation Devvo, making him one of the most prolific animators of his generation. See more of his strange stories at fat-pie.com
David is now working with a major UK production company on a new show that will appear soon on a TV near you...
Worldwide film rights & book publishing
On 31 August 1833 the Amphitrite, carrying 102 female prisoners and 12 of their children, left her mark on history: the first convict ship to be lost at sea since the beginning of transportation 45 years earlier. It was a needless disaster, caused as much by seething tensions aboard the vessel as the storm that blew her onto the coast of France. The British Government, in an attempt to cover up the scandal, refused even to release the names of the women, denying them the simple dignity of an identity and condemning them to oblivion...… Until now.
Gerald Stone, best-selling author and acclaimed journalist, masterfully retells the tragic story of the last voyage of the Amphitrite, bringing the lost woman back to life in a compelling work of living, breathing history. See more information on the movie potential of Beautiful Bodies
UPDATE:KINDLE version of the book is now available - see website
Script editing and treatment preparation
Parc Life takes place on the Llan Ydia Park Home site in rural Mid-Wales, and is populated by a collection of misfits and eccentrics. Seemingly luxurious, with pretensions of grandeur, the reality is very different: seedy and run-down behind the facades, with grown-ups behaving badly, like kids on holiday. Parc Life follows the adventures of the staff and some of the lunatic residents.
Parc Life is currently in development - watch this space for more news.