Elliot Warren

Elliot Warren

Profile

Elliot Warren

Movies

How to Have Sex
Male Club Rep
Three British teenage girls go on a rites-of-passage holiday—drinking, clubbing and hooking up, in what should be the best summer of their lives.
The Batman
Train Gang Leader
In his second year of fighting crime, Batman uncovers corruption in Gotham City that connects to his own family while facing a serial killer known as the Riddler.
Boys On Film 21: Beautiful Secret
Geeza (segment "Memoirs Of A Geeza")
Those boys you know and love are back! Boys On Film invites you on a voyage of emotion-soaked self-discovery, where same-sex attraction is celebrated, first loves are tenderly formulated, and beautiful secrets burn and bloom. Volume 21: Beautiful Secret includes nine complete films: Theo James Krekis's "Memoirs Of A Geeza" starring Elliot Warren and Tony Richardson; Joe Morris's "We Are Dancers" starring Hans Piesbergen and Simon Eckert; Zachary Ayotte's "My Dad Works The Night Shift" starring Victor Boudreault, Antoine L'Écuyer, and François Trudel; Loïc Hobi's "The Pier Man" starring Hubert Girard and Youssouf Abi-Ayad; Jason Bradbury's "My Sweet Prince" starring Yodi Roodner; Abel Rubinstein's "Dungarees" starring Pete MacHale and Ludovic Jean-Francios; Sam Peter Jackson's "Clothes & Blow" starring David Menkin and Nancy Baldwin; George Dogaru's "A Normal Guy" starring Vlad Bîrzanu and Pedro Aurelian; and Pierce Hadjinicola & Sinclair Suhood's "Pretty Boy" starring Orlando Norman.
A Christmas Carol
Rag & Bone Man
London, 1843. Ebenezer Scrooge, a bitter old man, despises the Christmas holiday. Over the course of Christmas Eve night he is visited by three ghosts to show him his past, present and future.
Memoirs of a Geeza
Geeza
A top lad recollects fights, friends and painting his toenails with his dad.
Hard Times
Danny
On the night Danny is due to look after his daughter he is forced to do a job for a local criminal.
To A Cinder
Paul
This film is about a man with a saviour complex, who is anything but. It is about the unacceptability of violence against women and girls, and ultimately a caution for us all to be aware that what we believe we are witnessing may not be everything it seems to be.