Raoul Bhaneja stepped back into familiar territory last month, reuniting with Dennis Quaid for Signal One, a quiet sci-fi drama directed by Jonathan Sobol. The film landed on Apple TV and other digital platforms in mid-June. UK audiences got access on June 15 via Signature Entertainment.
Bhaneja announced the release on Instagram with a post full of genuine warmth. He described the film as “a chamber piece of an alien movie, more about the human struggle of contact than the behaviour of green space men.” That framing says a lot about what Sobol was going for. The story centers on how people process alien contact – what it does to their relationships and their sense of what matters. The aliens themselves, to borrow Bhaneja’s phrase, stay mostly offscreen.
The ensemble is one of the more unexpected things about this production. Signal One brings together Bhaneja and Quaid alongside Isabella Fuhrman, Josh Hutcherson, and David Thewlis. Fuhrman and Hutcherson are both recognizable from the Hunger Games franchise, a curious pairing to see together again in very different material. Thewlis has spent over thirty years building a reputation as one of Britain’s most committed character actors, and his presence gives the film a specific kind of gravity.
Bhaneja didn’t hold back in expressing his admiration. He called Thewlis “one of my favourite actors from the UK all time.” It’s hard to argue with that. Thewlis’s career stretches from Mike Leigh’s Naked in 1993 through decades of acclaimed stage and screen work on both sides of the Atlantic. Quaid, meanwhile, has spent recent years gravitating toward character-led projects. His pairing with Bhaneja clearly has something going for it. This is their second film together.
The production was shot in the Cayman Islands. Bhaneja credited Ronnie James Hughes for helping the team get acquainted with the location. Nicholas Tabarrok co-produced through Radial Entertainment, working alongside Darius Films. Bhaneja called Tabarrok an “old friend” and credited him as someone who “always creates a unique and cool film experience.”
The way Bhaneja framed Signal One in his announcement is worth paying attention to. He didn’t lead with credits or plot. He led with what the story is actually about – the human experience of contact with something unknown. That’s a deliberate choice, and it suggests he wants audiences to approach Signal One as a character drama that happens to involve aliens.
Chamber sci-fi is a rare thing. The genre typically rewards scale and spectacle. Films that resist that pull tend to divide audiences. They’re also often the ones that stay with you longest.
Signal One is available now to rent or purchase on Apple TV and other digital platforms in most regions. UK viewers can find it through Signature Entertainment.
