THE BROMLEY BOYS IS NOW AVAILABLE TO STREAM ON NETFLIX IN THE UK.

Warren is a multi-talented British independent filmmaker, screenwriter and author. He studied at Tideway School, Newhaven, East Sussex,  before embarking on a career in print and design.

Following a brief dalliance with music, he turned to writing and got his big break in 2012 adapting Dave Roberts’s football memoir THE BROMLEY BOYS. The movie, starring Alan Davies and Martine McCutcheon, went on to have a successful UK and US cinema run and has garnered critical acclaim.

Fast forward to 2024 and his latest film FRIGHT, received its World Premiere at FrightFest, to universal critical acclaim, being compared to THE HAUNTING and THE INNOCENTS. Dealing with the serious issue of chronic agoraphobia faced by an isolated young woman in 1937 Britain, Dudley crafts an intensely riveting period horror shot in black and white. The film is set for a late 2024 release (?)

Growing up, Warren’s mind was never far from football and his beloved Brighton and Hove Albion. Following the success of THE BROMLEY BOYS, he wrote and directed SEASIDE TOWN (2018), a 6-part football comedy for Amazon Prime, shot in his hometown of Newhaven. Also, as an author, he penned a fictional footballing memoir SIR UNWIN PUGH: FROM HULL TO CAMP NOU. He also wrote BABY BLUE: AN AMERICAN HORROR STORY. 

Through his production company Sixty6Films, Warren is noted as being a strong advocate for independent filmmaking, dedicated to creating commercially viable, high-end looking genre feature films on very small budgets. His prolific output includes found-footage horror THE CUTTING ROOM (2015), plus claustrophobic thriller CAGE (2016), starring Lucy-Jane Quinlan and Patrick Bergin.

In 2022, triggered by the concern for his young daughter’s safety, Warren channelled his fears into writing and directing SIX YEAR’S GONE, about the redemptive journey a mother takes trying to solve the chilling mystery of her daughter’s abduction. Still streaming worldwide, it received numerous awards including the London Independent Film Festival’s Audience Award.

Coincidentally, his daughter, Ellie, now sixteen, contributed to FRIGHT, drawing all the book illustrations that appear in the movie.

Sticking with the horror genre, his future projects include a frightener set in 1978.

Have a look around the site and get in touch if you’d like to chat about any of my projects… or something new!

07359 002666 / info@sixty6media.co.uk