Teleios, also known as Beyond the Trek, is an American science-fiction film written and directed by Ian Truitner. The film stars Sunny Mabrey, Lance Broadway, Michael Nouri, T.J. Hoban, Mykel Shannon Jenkins, Christian Pitre, Ursula Mills and Weetus Cren, and was edited by Gabriella Cristiani.
Teleios | |
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Directed by | Ian Truitner |
Written by | Ian Truitner |
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Jasmin Kuhn |
Edited by | Gabriella Cristiani |
Music by | Roman Kovalik |
Production company | Thousand Mile Media |
Distributed by | Screen Media Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
For two years, a deep space mining vessel has been drifting off Saturn’s moon, Titan. The crew may have killed each other but their fate is unknown. In an attempt to investigate, a rescue vessel with a crew of genetically modified advanced humans is sent on the deep space explorer “Teleios” to discover if there are any survivors and to find out what happened. Little do they realise that what they are about to discover may threaten to destroy themselves and the whole of humanity.
The film had its world premiere at Sci-Fi-London[1] and U.S. premiere at Shriekfest.[2] The film has won several awards, including Best Science Fiction Feature at The New York Science Fiction Film Festival,[3] Best Director at the American Movie Awards and Best Special FX at the Maverick Movie Awards.
The film was renamed "Beyond the Trek" and distributed in North America through Screen Media Films.[4] The release title of Teleios has changed in different countries. It's known as "Deep Space" in the U.K.,[5] "Teleios - Endlose Angst" in Germany,[6] "Beyond the Trek" in Japan, and by its original title, "Teleios", in Australia.[7]
The Austin Chronicle said, "Truitner's story of social strata, and the terrifying potential of gene tampering, has found a new timeliness.".[8] First Comics News gave it 4 out of 5 stars, saying "For the start, the show is low key. Things do really start getting interesting as the show takes some unexpected twists and turns."[4] Film Threat gave the film a 6 out of 10, stating "Visually, the movie rocks. This is an indie effort worthy of note that fails to tick a few boxes, but still deserves perhaps a “B” for effort."[9]