Phil Hodges

Phil Hodges

Profile

Phil Hodges

Movies

Sitting in Limbo
Guard
Anthony Bryan and his personal struggle to be accepted as a British Citizen during the Windrush immigration scandal.
Holmes & Watson
Mr. Algernon Barkworth (uncredited)
Detective Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson join forces to investigate a murder at Buckingham Palace. They soon learn that they have only four days to solve the case, or the queen will become the next victim.
Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald
Prisoner 001 (uncredited)
Gellert Grindelwald has escaped imprisonment and has begun gathering followers to his cause—elevating wizards above all non-magical beings. The only one capable of putting a stop to him is the wizard he once called his closest friend, Albus Dumbledore. However, Dumbledore will need to seek help from the wizard who had thwarted Grindelwald once before, his former student Newt Scamander, who agrees to help, unaware of the dangers that lie ahead. Lines are drawn as love and loyalty are tested, even among the truest friends and family, in an increasingly divided wizarding world.
The Current War
City Gent
Electricity titans Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse compete to create a sustainable system and market it to the American people.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens
X-Wing Pilot (uncredited)
Thirty years after defeating the Galactic Empire, Han Solo and his allies face a new threat from the evil Kylo Ren and his army of Stormtroopers.
D-Day 360
German Soldier
From PBS - Focusing on the most important strip of Omaha beach that day - the exit at Vierville-sur-Mer - D-DAY 360 strips D-Day back to its raw data to reveal how the odds of victory, in the greatest gamble of World War II, swung on what happened over a five-hour period on a five mile stretch of French coastline. Data gathered though forensic laser scanning, 3D computer modeling, and eye-witness accounts bring the battlefield to life as never before.
The Unseen Holocaust
Decades after the Nazi death camps were eventually closed; exclusive fresh material from Soviet Film Archives has appeared revealing the true degree of the shocks before what we now know as the Holocaust.