Fifty struck-off companies leave UK film creditors chasing a vanishing counterparty
Companies House has dissolved roughly fifty companies linked to producer Alan Latham, erasing the legal entities that small suppliers and freelancers need to pursue unpaid invoices.

On 21 June 2026, news emerged that roughly fifty companies linked to prolific UK-based film producer Alan Latham have been struck off the Companies House register. The dissolutions remove the legal entities that small suppliers, freelancers and service companies had been invoicing for work on productions that, in some cases, involved major international cast. Without a corporate counterparty, creditors cannot pursue the debts they are owed through the ordinary insolvency route. They are left to chase a man rather than a business.
The case sits inside a familiar British pattern: a prolific individual operator stacks dozens of single-purpose corporate shells around each production, runs them lean, and then allows Companies House to dissolve the empty ones when the project closes. When the producer himself is still trading through a successor vehicle, the people who carried the project — props houses, location caterers, camera rental firms, freelance runners — find that the legal person they invoiced no longer exists. The debt does not vanish, but the door marked "sue the company" does.
A producer with a long CV and a thin corporate skin
Reporting identifies Latham as a producer whose projects have involved well-known international cast, including Kelsey Grammer, the American actor best known for his long run on the US sitcom Frasier. The productions sit inside a recognisable segment of the British film economy: independently financed, often internationally distributed, and reliant on a long tail of small suppliers for everything from set dressing to post-production sound. That supplier base operates on thin margins and short payment terms; it is the part of the industry least equipped to absorb a bad debt.
The decision to strike off a company in the UK is administrative rather than punitive. Companies House removes a limited company from the register when it fails to file confirmation statements or accounts, or when it is shown to have ceased trading. The trigger is bureaucratic non-compliance, not a court finding of misconduct. The effect, however, is the same as a liquidation for anyone holding an unsecured invoice: the entity they were dealing with ceases to be a person in law.
Why "strike-off" is not the same as "wound up"
The standard remedy for an unpaid supplier is a county-court claim, followed if necessary by a winding-up petition that places the company into compulsory liquidation. A liquidator is then appointed, assets are gathered, and creditors share whatever is left in a prescribed order. That mechanism depends on the defendant company existing.
Once a company has been struck off and dissolved, a creditor can apply to the court to have it restored to the register — typically within six years of dissolution — so that proceedings can continue. Restoration is technically straightforward but practically expensive: it requires a court application, payment of fees, and often the cooperation of a former director who may or may not be available. For a freelance camera assistant owed a few thousand pounds on a production that wrapped two years ago, the cost-benefit calculation rarely favours restoration. The result is that many small debts simply die with the company.
The procedure exists for a reason: dissolving defunct companies keeps the register clean and protects other businesses from dealing with zombie counterparties. But it has long been exploited as a low-cost exit by operators who run multiple special-purpose vehicles and treat the registry as disposable infrastructure. Each shell is incorporated cheaply, used for one project, and then abandoned.
The structural read
The pattern is not unique to film. Construction, recruitment, hospitality and logistics in Britain all host similar micro-portfolios of single-purpose companies clustered around a controlling individual. The temptation is structural: the limited company is a piece of liability armour, and the Companies House strike-off is the off-ramp. When the off-ramp is used at scale, the cost is borne by the small suppliers and freelancers who do not have the legal budget to follow a dissolved entity through restoration proceedings.
What makes Latham's case notable is the volume. "Around fifty" struck-off companies is not a routine tidy-up; it is a corporate estate that has been allowed to lapse in bulk. That scale suggests either administrative collapse at the centre of the portfolio, or a deliberate pattern of use-and-dispose that has only become visible because so many shells have now hit the register at once. Either reading points in the same direction for creditors: the moment to have pursued payment through the corporate route has, in many cases, already passed.
The stakes for the people who actually make films
For a major star or a sales agent working on a completed picture, an unpaid invoice from a struck-off company is a nuisance. For a Cardiff-based props hire firm, a Manchester post-production house, or a self-employed location manager, it can be the difference between trading through the next quarter and closing the door. The British independent film sector has long rested on a network of small companies that extend credit to producers on the strength of past relationships and a shared assumption that the company at the other end of the invoice will still exist when the payment date arrives.
When that assumption breaks at scale, the response from the supplier side is predictable and damaging: tighter payment terms, demands for deposits, and a willingness to walk away from borderline projects. That makes independent British film — already a high-risk, low-margin business — measurably harder to produce. The legal remedy is restoration through the courts; the practical remedy is whatever contracting discipline suppliers can impose on the next project, with the next producer, before work begins.
What remains unclear
The reporting does not specify how many creditors are affected in total, nor the aggregate value of the unpaid invoices now attached to dissolved entities. It is also not clear from the available material whether Latham himself remains solvent and trading through one or more surviving companies, or whether the wider corporate estate is in broader financial difficulty. The framing in coverage suggests that the human counterparty is still reachable, which leaves open the slower and more expensive route of a personal claim against the director — a path most small suppliers will struggle to resource. Whether any of the struck-off companies are restored, and on whose application, will be the next datapoint worth watching.
Monexus framed this story around the legal architecture that determines who can collect and who cannot, rather than around the personalities involved — the standard wire read treats strike-off as a procedural footnote, when for creditors it is the closing of the courtroom door.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/s/cluster_5f13d7d0f0