WRITTEN & Directed by Danny Gibbons
PRODUCED BY Charles Meunier
Co-PRODUCEr Eduard Mitra
Set entirely inside the confines of a taxi cab, on what seems like just another late-night taxi fare, this particular trip is anything but, altering the course of the lives of both driver and rider forever.
One evening 15-year-old Isa enters Rene's cab and his life. At first, he perceives her as just another annoying 'woke' teenager on what he hoped was another simple and quiet journey, but as a revelation about Isa's situation comes to light, this goes from a dime-a-dozen taxi fare to a life-changing experience that forces Rene to confront things in his life that he has been running from for the longest time.
ABOUT THE FILM
Sherbet won Best Director at the BIFA Qualifying Brighton Rocks where it was also the runner up for Best Drama. Other notable festival awards include Best Makeup at the BIFA Qualifying Unrestricted View Film Festival (where India Brown was also Runner Up for Best Performance), the Emerging Talent award and Best Actress at New Renaissance Film Festival, and Best Cinematrography & Best Coulourist at the Wolverhampton Film. It also won the Audience Choice award at Film Tottenham.
Other notable festival screenings include theNorthampton Film Festival, Beeston Film Festival, Sunrise Film Festival, Mansfield Town, Romford Film, and Poppy Jasper.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKER
Born and raised in the East Midlands, Danny Gibbons has what many would call a 'late' start in the industry, not making his first short film until the age of 27. Taking a creative look at the less publicised emotional abuse, Danny quickly finds success on the festival circuit with his debut short film Mark’d, winning the one-off Warner Brothers Short Film Festival, with Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech, Les Misérables) calling it a "powerful and visceral physicalisation of a very real issue". Mark’d goes on to amass over 1.4 million views online across all platforms and is included in dozens of Domestic Violence Resource packs across the UK.
Danny’s next short, Last Dance, is a psychological horror that plays with the horror trope of a monster lurking in the shadows, but with the twist of incorporating current real-world issues. The film has a very successful festival run, being selected and winning awards worldwide, including the Melies D’Argent at Razorreel Film Festival and culminating with the Melies D’Or for Best European Short Film at the prestigious Sitges Film Festival in 2021.
In 2024, Danny releases Sherbet, starring Jay Simpson (Chernobyl (2019), Blitz (2024)) and India Brown (Invasion (2021–), That Christmas (2024)). The film screens worldwide, winning several awards including Best Director at the BIFA-Qualifying Brighton Rocks and “Best Emerging Talent” at the New Renaissance Film Festival.
READ OUR INTERVIEW WITH Danny
Welcome to our Short of the Week series. Tell us a bit about yourself and your filmmaking background.
Much like everyone else chasing the filmmaking dream, I fell in love with films from a very early age, they were worlds I loved getting lost in and they fed my wild imagination that I had as a child. I used to think I wanted to be an actor, and I pursued that for a while with varied levels of success, but it wasn’t until I was in my mid twenties that I pivoted and decided to give the behind the camera side of things a go. So I went back to university as a “mature student” and learned the craft of filmmaking. It was there I made Mark’d, a short, which was an experimental look and physicalisation of emotional abuse. Somehow the short went viral and amassed over 1.5 Million views across all platforms, which are rookie numbers now for social media but back then it was pretty substantial and set me up quite nicely going forward into my next short ‘Last Dance’, a horror which won the Méliès d'Argent at Razor Reel Flanders Film Festival and ultimately went on to win the prestigious Méliès d'Or at Sitges Film Festival. Sherbet is my third and follow up short.
Tell us about the genesis of Sherbet. Where did the idea come from and how did you develop that idea into the short that's now made its way out into the world?
What a great question. The genesis of Sherbet sort of came about from a multitude of different avenues for me, three in particular, so please stick with me. The first one being I have always been fascinated with the taxi driver and passenger dynamic, anyone who has ridden for a long time in a cab can attest to the unique conversation that can take place within the confines of the cab, and it’s something that won’t be around forever with market of self driving cars growing. It’s also a familiar and relatable concept to set a story in.
The second one being that about the time I conceptualised Sherbet I was in a bit of a slump, with running the risk of sounding super pretentious, I was basically the embodiment of both Rene and Isa. I was in my thirties and I hadn’t had the success that younger me had planned, everyone around me was getting promotions in their jobs, getting married, having children and I was angry and bitter for a while that it wasn’t fair, and contemplated quitting. I felt stuck, but that dreamer in me remained. The hunger and passion for it remained, so it was this inner turmoil that I battled with for a while and Rene and Isa were sort of born from that.
The final ingredient in the sherbet conceptualisation was actually a specific experience I had in a taxi one evening. I had just screened Mark’d at Pinewood Studios and I was getting a cab home. The driver, obviously curious why he was picking me up from Pinewood enquired about myself and ultimately Mark’d. He asked if he could watch it, and thinking he was just being polite, I nonchalantly told him where he could find it online and we quickly moved on. About a week later I got an email from a name I didn’t recognise, and it so turns out that the taxi driver had in fact watched the film, and had emailed me to tell me that after watching it he had recognised some traits of emotional abuse in his own marriage and that the short film was an eye opener for him and it was going to change his life. I often wonder if it ever did, but it made me realise that the most innocuous of conversations/interaction with strangers can change the course of either person's trajectory and that is one of the central themes of Sherbet.
What were some of the main obstacles you experienced when making Sherbet and how did you overcome them?
As with making any short film, the first obstacle to overcome is always…money. You’d think with it just being two characters in one location, it’s quite contained and cheap, but my producers hated me, it’s never cheap. Especially if you want to make it to a professional standard. We were in a unique position that while it was a singular location, our singular location was a moving one. So outside of money, our biggest obstacle was ‘how do we do this, and do it well?’.
A moving car is so hard to shoot in, it’s risky and if you do it through all the legal channels it’s expensive, so we quickly ruled that out. I have also never been a fan of green screens when it comes to moving car scenes, the light just never looks natural and there is always an artificial look to it all. The future is definitely Virtual Production walls, and we explored this option, but you are talking thousands of pounds per day, which we just couldn’t afford, so we had to get creative and think outside the box. Firstly we established what the technology was from a hardware point of view, just huge TV's, right? So we decided to rent three large TV's instead, and pair it with a software largely used on high end sets for video playback, called QTAKE, and ran our own driving plates that we’d shot through that to the TV's, essentially creating our own smaller Virtual Production volume wall. I’m biased but I think it worked well for a fraction of the cost.
WATCH THE MAKING OF “SHERBET“
Tell us about the journey of getting your film to audiences and some of the festival circuit highlights and/or online release.
I have to be honest, the journey through the festival circuit in many ways is my least favourite part of the whole process. It’s the first time you’re not really in control of your own films fate. We knew that having a twenty-three minute short was going to hinder us and be an uphill battle in some ways, but we believed its quality would shine through in the long run. I know it’s quite a controversial take, but I’m also not the biggest fan of sitting in a cinema and watching my own work play out in front of a live audience. Saying that, Sherbet’s festival run was ultimately a good one and I consider it a success. We went up and down the country with it, met some amazing people along the way and got lots of lovely laurels for our poster which is the true barometer of one’s worth, right? I kid. Seriously though, winning Best Director at Brighton Rocks, and the Best Emerging Talent Award at New Renaissance Film Festival where the prize was £1000 were particular highlights, because short films NEVER make money so that’s always nice. Now the film is out in the world for everyone to watch, enjoy, critique, and the response from everyone that has seen it has genuinely been amazing, and I am super happy and content with Sherbet’s life cycle and it’s one that I’m truly proud of.
What advice or hacks would you give to other short filmmakers?
I’ll double down on what I said above, if you’re going to shoot a moving car scene, and consider the technique above as a ‘hack’. I don’t know if I’m allowed to advertise here, but we did a masterclass for British Cinematographer where we break down how we pulled it off, which I think is worth checking out, but I’m biased. Or I'm more than happy for people to reach out to me with questions. I guess as a broader statement, what I’m trying to say is, and I don’t want to sound too preachy here, but don’t let people dictate you or price you out of making your film. So many people will tell you it’s not possible, or it’s too ambitious, or it won’t work, but if you know it will, find a way to do it anyway. It’s not enough to be a good storyteller these days, you need to be a good problem solver too, an ability to pivot, think outside the box, and find a way. Don’t wait for permission.
Any film recommendations that we should add to our watchlist?
Well if you’re here watching Sherbet, and you enjoy this sort of thing, I’ll try and keep it within theme, and it would be amiss of me not to recommend a film that heavily inspired me/it, which is Locke. It always surprises me the amount of people who haven’t seen it, a concept you think can’t/shouldn’t work, but it’s truly a grounded and gripping piece of cinema, is a captivating watch, and comes with a phenomenal performance from Tom Hardy.
Congrats on winning the Kino Short Film Fund with your next project. Can you give us a sneak peek?
Thank you very much. We’re very grateful and very excited to be working with Kino on our next short, Pushing Daisy. It’s a zainy, genre bending short set largely in a morgue that blends sitcom and drama. It follows Daisy, a seemingly buoyant mortician as she navigates an offbeat world of sitcom absurdity and somber reality as she grapples with her own unresolved trauma when her late husband’s mistress ends up on her slab. It’s such a stark contrast from Sherbet, (but somehow explores some of the same themes?) its wildly ambitious and if I’m being completely honest, the challenge of pulling it off scares me, which is usually a good indicator that we’re on the right path, so we’re super excited to get it made.