The British actor returns this year in Tape 52, the second installment of the independent sci-fi horror franchise he co-created, a project that began as a low-budget experiment and has steadily grown into an expanding cinematic universe. With its release scheduled for late 2026, Tape 52 signals not only the evolution of a story, but the evolution of an actor who is increasingly positioning himself on an international stage.
The World of Tape 52
Tape 52 continues the narrative established in Tape 51, a found-footage sci-fi horror film developed by Deakins and fellow actor and writer Adam Nancholas. The original film emerged from a period early in their careers when both performers sought greater creative control. Rather than waiting for opportunity, they built their own.
Working within the found-footage format allowed the team to operate on a modest budget while maintaining ambitious thematic scope. The story followed David, portrayed by Deakins, whose obsessive pursuit of the truth surrounding a mysterious extraterrestrial encounter leads to catastrophic consequences.

When Tape 51 premiered in London and later in the southwest of the United Kingdom, the response exceeded expectations. Audience buzz and direct inquiries about expanding the film into a feature-length sequel prompted the team to continue developing the world they had created.
With Tape 52, that world widens. The sequel builds upon the psychological aftermath of the first film. David returns as the sole survivor of the encounter, navigating guilt, trauma, and the consequences of his earlier actions. While the film retains the tension and immediacy of the found-footage style, the production scale has grown significantly.
Deakins and Nancholas once again serve as writers and actors, maintaining narrative continuity. The screenplay also includes contributions from Katrina Halliman, who helped deepen the emotional dimension of David’s character, and Simone Herstad, who assisted in early production and script refinement during development in London.
Behind the camera, the sequel incorporates more extensive visual effects than its predecessor. The opening sequence alone involves ambitious drone work and VFX collaboration with Furrifingers, a company co-owned by Deakins’ sister, bringing technical expertise that elevated the visual scale of the film.
The cast has also expanded. Christian Pease joins as a central new presence in the film, alongside Adam Statham, Benny Williams, and additional new actors who broaden the narrative beyond David’s immediate perspective. These characters represent individuals who exist within the same unsettling universe, some aware of the events that have transpired, others indirectly affected by them.
Rather than simply amplifying spectacle, Tape 52 focuses on consequence. David’s relentless pursuit of truth in the first installment comes at a cost, and the sequel examines what remains when survival replaces certainty.
Beyond Tape 52: Expanding Roles
While the Tape franchise continues to develop, Deakins’ broader acting career has also gained traction. He recently appeared in A24’s Warfare, directed by Ray Mendoza and Alex Garland. Known for backing distinctive and director-driven projects, A24 has become synonymous with elevated genre storytelling, and Deakins’ involvement signals steady recognition beyond independent circles.
In addition, Deakins’s work in Alien Outbreak back in 2020 further reinforces his positioning within the sci-fi and action space. The project allowed him to explore physical intensity alongside emotional depth, something he has identified as a key area of artistic growth. Earlier in his career, he often leaned heavily on physicality in performance. Recent roles reflect a conscious shift toward layered, psychological storytelling.
The throughline across these projects is clear: Deakins gravitates toward genre films that explore human consequence within heightened worlds. Whether in the found-footage intimacy of Tape 52 or the broader scope of studio-backed productions, his performances sit at the intersection of tension and vulnerability.
Looking Across the Atlantic
That expanding trajectory now includes geographic ambition. Deakins is preparing to relocate to the United States, where he plans to further develop his career as an actor. As part of that transition, he is applying for an artist visa with the assistance of The Espejo Organization for the Arts, a New York–based arts employment mobility consultancy that works with internationally recognized creative professionals.
The move represents more than relocation. It reflects an intentional next phase. For many international actors, the U.S. market presents broader production infrastructure and increased genre opportunity. For Deakins, whose recent projects sit squarely within sci-fi and elevated action storytelling, the American industry offers a natural expansion of the path he has already begun carving.
The Tape franchise itself could potentially benefit from that shift. Independent franchises that originate in the UK but grow international audiences often find new momentum through transatlantic collaboration. Whether future installments of the series will involve U.S.-based production remains to be seen, but the possibility aligns with the broader arc of the actor’s ambitions.