FIRELAND
Original scripted television series
Project Overview
Fireland is an original scripted television series set in South America, following an international group on a long-distance motorcycle journey toward the southern tip of the continent. What begins as a carefully planned expedition fractures early, as authority breaks down and decisions made under pressure begin to carry real, irreversible consequences.
As the journey continues, the group is forced to confront not only the physical risks of unfamiliar terrain but the psychological costs of movement itself—who leads, who follows, and what happens when responsibility is quietly refused.
Status: In active development
Narrative & Structure
The series is built as an ensemble drama, tracking how group dynamics shift under sustained physical and psychological pressure. Rather than escalating toward clear hierarchy or resolution, Fireland observes the slow erosion of authority—how leadership is tested, resisted, and, at times, abandoned altogether. Episodes are structured around moments of misalignment, logistical strain, and moral decision-making, allowing conflict to emerge through action rather than declaration.
Tone & Genre Positioning
While rooted in realism, the series allows for moments of ambiguity shaped by character perception rather than overt genre mechanics. Threat and uncertainty are filtered through exhaustion, fear, and misinterpretation, maintaining a restrained tone in which danger is often sensed before it is understood.
Format
The project is conceived as a long-form scripted television series with multi-season potential, designed to unfold across extended movement through diverse environments and evolving group dynamics.