Warren Dudley is a Brighton-born film maker and writer. His new movie, Cage, is available worldwide via Amazon and his screenplay, The Bromley Boys, is due in cinemas later this year.

What is your favourite place in Sussex?

The stretch of cliff between Seaford and Cuckmere. Beautiful. We’re incredibly lucky to live so close to it.

What do you love most about living in Sussex?

Friends, family and football. Many of my old school mates from Tideway have left and moved away – the furthest I ever got was moving to North Laine for a while. Why would you want to live anywhere else when you have the best city in the country ten minutes down the coast? I currently live with my wife Kath and daughter Ellie in Seaford and love it there.

What advice do you have for your 12-year-old self?

Don’t worry about what others think or say about you and don’t get stressed about the little things. I remember turning up for school with my jumper on inside out aged 12 and it took me about 6 months to recover from the embarrassment.

What is your most valued possession?

At the time of writing my WSU season ticket at the Amex.

What is your biggest regret?

Not starting writing until my mid-thirties. I look back on all the time I spent loving comedy and movies when I could have been writing them.

What is your biggest fear?

Getting to the age of 70, looking back and wondering what I’ve done with my time and wishing I’d done more... and spiders.

What is your proudest achievement?

Meeting and marrying Kath (more luck than pride if I’m honest) and my two daughters who are growing into lovely people. On a personal level I am always doing bits and pieces that I hope to look back on with lots of pride. I co-created the Albion fan mosaic at the Amex when it opened and it still hangs in Dick’s Bar to this day – it’s amazing to have an idea I had still viewed by Albion fans every day.

Which five people (living or dead) would you invite to your fantasy dinner party?

The Beatles and Pete Best. It would be incredible to talk to them about their adventure and the addition of Best may add some friction as the wine flows and John Lennon starts getting angry.