When her old friend Megan (Edwards) joins the team as a trainee manager, Alys hopes their shared history will benefit her.
Black had met Aysha Rafaele and Marco Crivellari at BBC Studios, at first developing a legal drama series.
Subsequently, she was asked to work on a factual drama with director Joe Bullman, drawing from his research into warehouse employees.
[3] Lucy Mangan of The Guardian awarded the film four out five stars, praising its examination of worker conditions, remarking 'Black's drama does this perfectly, aided by fine performances (including Aled ap Steffan as Alys's friend, co-worker and brave union rep Devon).
It covers a lot of sociopolitical ground without forgetting to make us care about the people – those 1 million and counting – who are suffering as its footsoldiers.'.