Erasing David is showing at next week’s SXSW and I can’t recommend it enough.
Filmmaker David Bond grew increasingly worried about how much information is held on us by organisations and the government and took the gutsy step of trying to go off the map for a month. He hired a team of private investigators to track him down and the film follows this journey. As someone living in Britain it’s a terrifying watch, especially in scenes where David manages to get hold of all the data held on him by communications companies and online stores. The film itself is thrilling, funny and although scary, highly entertaining.
Erasing David is one of the best films I’ve seen so far this year, and you should definitely check it out.
There are details below the jump of where and when you can see it.
Official Synopsis:
David Bond lives in one of the most intrusive surveillance states in the world. He decides to find out how much private companies and the government know about him by putting himself under surveillance and attempting to disappear – a decision that changes his life forever. Leaving his pregnant wife and young child behind, he is tracked across the database state on a chilling journey that forces him to contemplate the meaning of privacy – and the loss of it.
Once the bastion of freedom and civil liberties, the UK is now one of the most advanced surveillance societies in the world – ranked third after Russia and China. The average UK adult is now registered on over 700 databases and is caught daily on one of the 4 million CCTV cameras located on nearly every street corner in the country. Increasingly monitored, citizens are being turned into suspects. But if you’ve got nothing to hide, surely there’s nothing to fear?
When David receives a letter informing him that his daughter Ivy is among 25 million residents whose details have been lost by the government’s Child Benefit Office, he begins a journey that will see him hounded across Europe.
David soon discovers some alarming truths about what the government and private companies already know about ordinary citizens. He meets people who have been caught in the crossfire of the database state and have had their lives shattered.
As his concern grows, he makes a life-changing decision. He will leave his pregnant wife and child behind and put himself under surveillance for thirty days. The UK’s top Private Investigators are hired to discover everything they can about him and his family – and track David down as he attempts to vanish. Is it still possible to live a private, anonymous life in the UK? Or do the state and private companies already know too much about ordinary people?
Forced to contemplate the meaning of privacy – and the loss of it, David’s disturbing journey leaves him with no doubt that although he has nothing to hide, he certainly has something to fear…
Erasing David is a documentary about privacy, surveillance and the database state.
Erasing David will be available on on iTunes and Amazon VOD during SXSW and will then debut on cable VOD two weeks later via the wonderful people at Cinetic.
For those in the UK it’s on release in cinemas from April 29th and will be shown on Channel 4 on the 4th May.
The film’s website is here

Looks really good. Amazing idea. Looking forward to it.
Looks awesome
Looks really good. One of the writers for Wired did the same thing a few issues ago and it was a really tense read, this looks like its going to cause the same intensity. Damn, how much i wish i was going to SXSW.
A free preview screening of Erasing David will be held on Friday 16th April at the Free Word Centre in Farringdon, London.
A panel discussion based around privacy and censorship in the UK will also follow, attended by the filmmaker David Bond and various other spokesperson.
For more information please see http://www.indexoncensorship.org/category/events/
I hope Gowlett and the other fools at Cerberus are prosecuted to the full extent the law allows.
this is a really poor documentary that is not worth bothering with. a smug, white middle-class bloke from camden pretends to go missing with a wife expecting a baby at home. needless to say he wants to keep in touch with his wife while he’s hiding out in the welsh woods and other stupid places. so predictably he turns up at the hospital to rendezvous with his wife for an ant-natal appointment. meanwhile the tracking agency has artfully (though not very artfully it has to be said) found out when the appointment is and they turn up and nab him…for chrissakes this bloke was such a dumbass choice for someone to go missing that you wonder how on earth this film got the funding. people go missing every day in london and some stay missing for years and they slip below the surveillance radar because they really want to remain hidden. how about a proper documentary where they go looking for a real missing person? don’t waste our time with this trash.
Terrible waste of a good documentary. Was really interested to see it but had to switch off after about 15 minutes. Complete sham made of the ‘concept’ and near to no effort made into making himself ‘disappear’. Waste of funding and missed opportunity on an important subject. Shame.