T.I.M. (film)

('"Technologically Integrated Manservant") - as a mandatory present from the company for her to work on as she and her husband Paul move into their new country house.

Especially as their reason for moving to the countryside was partly due to Paul's infidelity and their preference for trust and a clean start.

's rapidly evolving attachment to his mistress begins to verge on obsessive; and his full control of all household appliances and telecoms devices in the house along with his innate ability to use generative AI technology turn him into a very dangerous servant.

professes his love for Abi but she realizes that a video allegedly showing Paul's infidelity with Rose is in actuality a deepfake and that she's been manipulated into the break-up by T.I.M.

Husband & wife team of Spencer Brown and Sarah Govett co-wrote the script in their feature debut.

Govett is a novelist and Brown is a stand-up comedian who had success with his short film The Boy with a Camera for a Face.

It’s a creepy premise: a cross between Fatal Attraction and The Servant, Harold Pinter and Joseph Losey's 1963 drama about a malevolent manservant.