Laser scanning is the controlled steering of laser beams followed by a distance measurement at every pointing direction, allowing for the rapid capture of the shape of objects, buildings and landscapes. It is usually employed for practical, architectural purposes, but director Liam Young found that it also presents interesting cinematic opportunities.

'Exploring the subcultures that emerge from these new technologies the film follows a group of young car factory workers across a single night, as they drift through the smart city point clouds in a driverless taxi, searching for a place they know exists but that the map doesn’t show. They are part of an underground community that work on the production lines by day but at night, adorn themselves in machine vision camouflage and the tribal masks of anti-facial recognition to enact their escapist fantasies in the hidden spaces of the city. They hack the city and journey through a network of stealth buildings, ruinous landscapes, ghost architectures, anomalies, glitches and sprites, searching for the wilds beyond the machine. We have always found the eccentric and imaginary in the spaces the city can’t see.'