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British Films

  • How UK indie exhibitors are engaging younger audiences with arthouse cinema

    > The industry is used to stories about UK cinema­going being in decline since the pandemic and younger viewers finding other ways to spend their leisure time. But a number of independent exhibitors counter that narrative based on their own experiences. While none downplay the struggles that arthouse cinema releases still face at the UK box office, many also highlight reasons for optimism. > > “We are seeing a flourishing of young cinephile audiences,” says Jake Garriock, director of publicity at leading UK arthouse distributor/exhibitor Curzon. > > David Sin, head of cinemas at the Independent Cinema Office (ICO), echoes that view. “A number of the highest-grossing films in that [arthouse] space in the post-­pandemic era have been films that are aimed at a younger audience than traditional arthouse cinema,” he says, citing titles such as Decision To Leave, Triangle Of Sadness and “a slew of British independent films like Scrapper and Saint Maud, aimed primarily at millennial and Gen Z audiences”. > > Sin believes UK arthouse distributors have been slanting their slates toward younger spectators, realising older audiences were initially reluctant post-Covid to come back to cinemas. Over the last two years, independent releases including Anatomy Of A Fall, La Chimera, Aftersun and The Zone Of Interest have played well with a younger demographic. More mainstream indie titles such as Saltburn and Challengers have played extremely well in university towns. > > “This younger audience has replaced the more traditional arthouse audience as the core supporter of independent and arthouse cinemas in the UK,” Sin suggests.

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  • Shinfield's new Hollywood TV and film studios now fully open
    www.bbc.com Shinfield's new Hollywood TV and film studios now fully open

    The site in Shinfield, Berkshire, has already been involved in making hit Hollywood productions.

    Shinfield's new Hollywood TV and film studios now fully open

    > The UK's newest film and TV studios have fully opened. > > The site in Shinfield, near Reading, boasts 18 sound stages, including two of the biggest in the country at 43,000 sq ft and has already attracted major feature films and TV series. > > Situated alongside the M4 motorway, the site was given the go-ahead by planners in 2021 and has opened in stages over the past two years. It is part of a boom in British film and TV production, much of it working to meet the demands of global streaming services. > > Its US owners say the studios should provide an economic boost with major films typically requiring productions crews of three to 500, including skilled technicians and craftspeople. > > ... > > Its first four sound stages were built to host the latest Disney+ Star Wars series, The Acolyte, which began screening on the streaming service earlier this month. > > Bosses at Shinfield say they managed to open the first part of the site "just in time" for the production to move in. > > The studios have already played host to the latest Ghostbusters film where one of the sound stages was turned into a New York street, complete with the iconic firehouse. > > But it has also been providing a site for home grown productions. > > Occupying one of the sound stages at the moment is a film of the Enid Blyton's The Magic Faraway Tree, which has been adapted by writer Simon Farnaby, who helped bring Paddington to the cinema and starring Clare Foy, who played the young Queen Elizabeth in Netflix's The Crown.

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  • Daisy Ridley's 'STAR WARS: EPISODE X - A NEW BEGINNING' will begin filming from September 2nd, 2024 in London, UK.
    productionlist.com Star Wars: Episode X - A New Beginning - Production List | Film & Television Industry Alliance

    Star Wars: A New Beginning is the official sequel to the Skywalker saga. The plot is expected to be about Rey rebuilding the Jedi Order after the events of The Rise of Skywalker. The film will be directed by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, who also directed episodes 4 and 5 of ‘Ms. Marvel’. Daisy Ridley is s...

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  • 'FANTASTIC FOUR' will start shooting from August 2nd, 2024 in London, UK
    productionlist.com Fantastic Four - Production List | Film & Television Industry Alliance

    Reed Richards, Ben Grimm, Susan Storm, and her brother, Johnny Storm, were forever changed during an experimental space flight that exposed them to cosmic rays, which gave them super human powers and abilities. Mister Fantastic, Invisible Woman, Human Torch, and the Thing utilize their scientific ba...

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  • ‘We’re excited’: arthouse hits draw young UK filmgoers to a summer of subtitles
    www.theguardian.com ‘We’re excited’: arthouse hits draw young UK filmgoers to a summer of subtitles

    A hiccup in the Hollywood studio machine has allowed indie films to flourish – and, crucially for cinemas, find a new generation of customers

    ‘We’re excited’: arthouse hits draw young UK filmgoers to a summer of subtitles

    > This time last summer, British cinemas were holding their collective breath, looking forward to the biggest box office weekend of the year. “Barbenheimer” came to the rescue, with the doubleheader of blockbusters jointly chalking up an initial total of £30m when released in mid-July. > > This summer is a different story. There may be no lucrative Barbie or Oppenheimer at hand, but the holiday months at the cinema look potentially more interesting, if not downright weird – at least when it comes to Sasquatch Sunset, this weekend’s new, grunting, wordless tale of mythical Bigfoot folk, starring Jesse Eisenberg and Elvis Presley’s granddaughter Riley Keough. > > As the impact of last year’s Hollywood talent strikes combines with streaming habits formed during Covid lockdowns, a window of opportunity has been created for film-makers’ wilder imaginings; for smaller-scale, arthouse fare. The franchise machine has slowed down and more original, risky features have slipped in. “I feel quite positive about the moment we’re in,” said Isabel Stevens, managing editor of the film magazine Sight and Sound, “although I do appreciate it’s still a very difficult for cinemas.” > > So far, 2024 has seen a box office slump, but is being brightened by breakthrough independent productions that dodge commercial templates and are often in foreign languages (that aren’t Sasquatch). Prominent among them is Italian film La Chimera starring British actor Josh O’Connor. Out for over a month now, it is still drawing audiences and has taken over £700,000 at the British and Irish box office. Director Alice Rohrwacher’s film is pulling off a trick that big-budget title The Fall Guy could not manage: it has become a hit beyond its own ambitions. It must also be quite a surprise to Rohrwacher herself, since her last film, Happy as Lazzaro, brought in just a fifth of that. > > ... > > Phil Clapp, head of the UK Cinema Association, recently told Screen International that a “slightly thinner slate of the familiar franchises” had created an intriguing opportunity. “Stories that are something the audience hasn’t seen before, and makes them want to go back to the cinema, are vital for us,” he said. > > In the relatively quiet period before the next action juggernauts trundle in, British cinephiles can celebrate the joys of a film such as Wim Wenders’s Perfect Days, the tale of a Tokyo toilet cleaner that has taken more than £1.3m in receipts. Or The Taste of Things, a quiet, kitchen-based French love story with Juliette Binoche, which took just under £700,000. And now there is the sentimental appeal of There’s Still Tomorrow, a black-and-white melo­drama that trounced Barbie at the box office in its native Italy and is distributed here by Vue Cinemas. It has taken more than £300,000. > > ... > > An early sign of a fresh thirst for originality came with the foreign-language hits of the latest award season, Anatomy of a Fall and The Zone of Interest, the latter made in German by British director Jonathan Glazer. > > Charles Gant, box office editor at Screen International, points out that these apparently niche films are attracting a wide audience. Glazer’s film took £3.4m – a healthy figure in comparison with his 2013 cult horror film Under the Skin, despite that film’s A-list star, Scarlett Johansson. “When I watched the premiere of Zone of Interest in Cannes, I thought it was going to be a hard sell, but it went on to take quite a lot of money,” he said. “And you really have to see it in the cinema.” > > ... > > Still more heartening for Britain is the success of the homegrown films Aftersun, How to Have Sex, Rye Lane and All of Us Strangers, especially in the face of reports that UK independent production has been falling off a cliff. Only in February, Mike Goodridge, producer of the recent Palme d’Or-winning satire Triangle of Sadness, told BBC’s Today programme that it was “essentially on its knees”, with skilled actors and crews all working for big American companies. > > Since then, the impact of enhanced tax reliefs for British productions has been felt. That is a measure that might encourage the kind of shake-up spelled out for the Oscar crowd in March by the award-winning screenwriter Cord Jefferson, when he pointedly called on film backers to think smaller. “Instead of making one $200m movie, try making 20 $10m movies. Or 50 $4m movies,” he urged. > > As far as Gant can tell, there is no big shift in Hollywood as yet, where franchises still rule the roost. “But studios do now understand they need a mix. Just look at a surprise, smaller-scale hit like the romcom Anyone But You, which has cut through.”

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  • Vue Cinemas UK move into distribution after Hollywood strikes limit film supply

    cross-posted from: https://reddthat.com/post/20727695

    > Paywalled link: https://www.ft.com/content/bdc1e3d1-c2f2-499d-a488-9186b0e9fcca

    > Europe’s largest privately owned cinema operator Vue International is moving into film distribution following a lack of supply after the Hollywood strikes. > > The company set up a distribution arm in the UK last month with the goal of rolling out British, foreign and independent films on its own screens and those of rivals. Vue also announced during the Cannes Film Festival last month that it would team up with UK producers Andy Paterson and Annalise Davis, and virtual production company Dimension Studio, in a project to distribute films they produce. “Because of the Hollywood strikes, we are suffering this year with a number of movies, [as] we have a supply issue,” chief executive Tim Richards told the Financial Times. “As a consequence, we thought it was a very opportune time to start bringing our own movies in.” > > He added that Vue would eventually expand its distribution business to continental Europe and that it was hiring for the business. > > Moving into distribution is a relatively unusual move for a cinema chain, but the new arm will allow Vue to gain greater control of films after a period of limited supply.

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  • Strike: An Uncivil War review – brutal confrontation on the miners’ strike picket lines
    www.theguardian.com Strike: An Uncivil War review – brutal confrontation on the miners’ strike picket lines

    Former miners and police officers recall Orgreave, one of the nastiest events in postwar British history, in Daniel Gordon’s forthright documentary

    Strike: An Uncivil War review – brutal confrontation on the miners’ strike picket lines

    > British schoolchildren are taught that the last full-scale military engagement on their soil was the battle of Culloden in 1746. But this should change: on 18 June 1984 the battle of Orgreave, the subject of Daniel Gordon’s documentary, was the bitterest moment of the miners’ strike of 1984-85. It was the last stand for both sides, a brutal and chaotic confrontation of about 5,000 pickets determined not to let trucks get through to pick up coke for the Scunthorpe steelworks, versus about 6,000 police officers, some mounted, and armed with new shields and batons. > > The police were effectively directed by Downing Street, which was determined that the force should not be overwhelmed by force of numbers as they had been during a comparable situation in the 1972 miners’ strike. A paramilitary strategy developed to suppress colonial disorder was deployed, laid out in a strategy document never shown to parliament. > > ... > > Gordon speaks to pickets who are still clearly traumatised by the events of Orgreave and by the strike in general. Perhaps therapy has never been on the cards for men of that generation and it could actually be that this film has been the first time that they have ever really spoken or thought deeply about the strike and its long term emotional effects. What emerges is the enduring bitterness that some felt towards those who returned to work; I flinched when one miner tells Gordon that his union-stalwart dad never forgave him for going back. When a reporter at the time asked whether he wouldn’t mind his son going to his funeral, he replies: “I’d rather go to his.” > > Police officers recount being instructed by their seniors to fabricate witness statements. BBC reporter Nick Jones is interviewed, rueful about the way things went down. No Tories appear on camera, though, Sir John Redwood, who was director of No 10’s policy unit during the strike, is thanked in the credits. > > This is a tough, valuable, forthright film about one of the nastiest, ugliest moments in postwar British history. Since 1985, the debate about fossil fuels has, of course, changed. But it is still staggering that a government planned wholesale mine closures with no thought for and no interest in what would happen to the communities affected. > > • Strike: An Uncivil War screened at the Sheffield documentary festival on 16 June, and is in UK and Irish cinemas from 21 June.

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  • Portrayal of character in Steve Coogan’s film The Lost King is defamatory, judge rules
    www.theguardian.com Portrayal of character in Steve Coogan’s film The Lost King is defamatory, judge rules

    Coogan, production company Baby Cow and Pathe, the distributors of the 2022 film, will now face a full trial

    Portrayal of character in Steve Coogan’s film The Lost King is defamatory, judge rules

    > The portrayal of a former university official in Steve Coogan’s film about the discovery of the remains of Richard III is defamatory, a high court judge has ruled. > > Richard Taylor, a former deputy registrar at the University of Leicester, is suing Coogan, the production company Baby Cow and the distributors Pathe. > > He claims the 2022 movie The Lost King shows his character, played by Lee Ingleby, behaving in an “abominable way” towards the amateur historian Philippa Langley, played by Sally Hawkins, who spearheaded the dig. > > Taylor claims the film shows him taking credit for himself and the university that was rightfully Langley’s for the 2012 discovery of Richard III’s remains in a Leicester car park more than 500 years after the king’s death. > > The defendants denied that the film portrayed such a “saint and sinner” narrative but, in a judgment published on Friday, Judge Lewis said its portrayal of the former university employee was defamatory.

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  • Should Hollywood look north after latest southern snub?
    www.cityam.com Should Hollywood look north after latest southern snub?

    Hollywood urged to look north after the latest studio rejection by a council in the south calls into question future of UK's film industry.

    Should Hollywood look north after latest southern snub?

    > Hollywood bigwigs have been called on to look north to stage their latest box office hits after the UK film industry was dealt another major blow recently as £750m plans for a new film studio in Buckinghamshire were quashed. > > Already home to Pinewood and Shepperton studios, planners at Buckinghamshire Council rejected proposals for a 36-hectare production site despite being backed by the likes of Avatar director James Cameron and actor and filmmaker Andy Serkis. > > In the aftermath of the decision West Yorkshire Mayor Tracy Brabin took to X (formerly Twitter) to call on film supremos to consider investing in Yorkshire instead of always defaulting to the South East. > > ... > > But while it appears the South might be falling out of love with Hollywood, the North is poised and ready to capitalise. > > Last December work started on a film studio on the site of the former Littlewoods pools business in Liverpool, which when finished will create 40,000 sq ft of production space. > > The recently approved Crown Works Studios in Sunderland, part-funded by the production company behind The Kardashians, will pave the way to create thousands of jobs across the north of England. > > ... > > The vast majority of the UK’s large-scale film studios – categorised by the British Film Commission as having at least one stage over 15,000 sq ft – are clustered around London, with production facilities in the south outnumbering the rest of the country 25 to five. > > The financial implications of this are huge. > >Every 100,000 sq ft of stage space contributes between £60m and £80m to the surrounding economy, according to a 2024 study commissioned by Hounslow Borough Council. > > The sector has already added £2bn to West Yorkshire’s economy alone, and employs 50,000 local people.

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  • German star at Cannes condemns ‘madness’ of protective culture for UK child actors
    www.theguardian.com German star at Cannes condemns ‘madness’ of protective culture for UK child actors

    Cast member of Palme d’Or contender shot in Kent says the high number of chaperones and intimacy coordinators on set was over the top

    German star at Cannes condemns ‘madness’ of protective culture for UK child actors

    > Is Britain leading the way in protecting young people and children from the potential traumas of working on a film set, or has it all gone far too far? Two of the most prominent European stars attending the Cannes film festival, both with high-profile premieres, have very different views. > > Franz Rogowski, the acclaimed German actor who plays a key role in Bird, British director Andrea Arnold’s contender for the top Palme d’Or prize, said this weekend that the proliferation of chaperones and intimacy coordinators that had been required on the shoot on location in Kent qualified as well-intended “madness”. > > Speaking after the premiere of the hard-hitting drama on Friday night, the 38-year-old actor said the high number of handlers employed to ensure the wellbeing of all the underage and child actors in the film had felt excessive to him. > > “It feels a bit off-balance,” said Rogowski, who went on to point out that children already have many other damaging freedoms online where they are more exposed to danger and not protected. > > But Judith Godrèche, the French actor and director who has shaken up the Croisette in the opening days of the festival with her personal crusade against abuse in the French film industry, said she believed that Britain, and in particular the BBC, was at the forefront of improvements in the way young people and children employed in film-making are looked after. She has made her own recent accusations that she was abused while working as an underage actor, allegations that are denied. > >Speaking at a public event staged above the famous red carpet of the Palais du Festival, Godrèche said: “It has been interesting to compare the reactions to #MeToo in the United States and in the UK. The BBC, I believe, have very serious and rigid rules protecting minors on set.” The French government and members of the National Assembly need to take note, she added: “They cannot continue to turn a blind eye to this.

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  • Kes: Forgotten 35mm film confirmed as 1969 original
    www.bbc.com Kes: Forgotten 35mm film confirmed as 1969 original

    Contained on seven reels, the copy is thought to be of only two originals still in existence.

    Kes: Forgotten 35mm film confirmed as 1969 original

    > A forgotten film canister discovered in a South Yorkshire loft has been found to contain an original 35mm copy of Ken Loach's 1969 film Kes. > > It is thought to be one of only two original copies still in existence, the other held by British Film Institute. > > Rob Younger, who will screen the movie at his Barnsley Parkway Cinema next month, said the film was in "amazingly good condition for its age". > > ... > > Based on Barnsley author Barry Hines' novel A Kestrel for a Knave, the film won two Bafta awards and was nominated for a further three. > > Mr Younger said: "To find something that's over 50 years old and the print hasn't run in most of that time, it's fantastic. > > "And the fact it's a Barnsley-based film, it's Kes, everyone in Barnsley loves Kes." > > Contained on seven separate reels of film the recently discovered version is thought to have been put into storage after being was shown on the big screen in 1970. > > The reels had sat undiscovered for decades before being passed to Ronnie Steele from a local fan group - the Kes Group. > > Mr Steele said he then approached Mr Younger to ask about showing it in the town. > > "[The film] made me feel proud, that not only did I belong to Barnsley, but I knew the author of the book, Mr Barry Hines. He taught me in secondary school," Mr Steele said. > > "[It is] a snapshot of Barnsley as it really was at that time. People were really proud that the characters were ordinary, working-class people, but at the same time, they were clever, smart, witty."

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  • Traffic Crossing Leeds Bridge motion picture by Louis Le Prince 1888

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11277564

    > > A Frenchman who also worked in the United Kingdom and the United States, Le Prince's motion-picture experiments culminated in 1888 in Leeds, England. In October of that year, he filmed moving-picture sequences of family members in Roundhay Garden and his son playing the accordion, using his single-lens camera and Eastman's paper negative film. At some point in the following eighteen months he also made a film of Leeds Bridge. This work may have been slightly in advance of the inventions of contemporaneous moving-picture pioneers, such as the British inventors William Friese-Greene and Wordsworth Donisthorpe, and was years in advance of that of Auguste and Louis Lumière and William Kennedy Dickson (who did the moving image work for Thomas Edison). > > Wikipedia

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  • Matt Smith's new horror movie [Starve Acre] confirms UK release date

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/11262504

    > > Matt Smith and Morfydd Clark's folk horror Starve Acre has confirmed its UK release date. > > > > The film, which premiered at last year's BFI London Film Festival to critical acclaim, will arrive in cinemas in the UK and Ireland on September 6. > > > > Set in rural England in the 1970s, Starve Acre stars Smith and Clark as Richard and Juliette, respectively. Their idyllic family life is turned upside down when their young son starts acting out of character. > > > > ... > > > > Discussing the film in a press statement, director Daniel Kokotajlo (Apostasy) said he’s a "sucker" for English folk tales like Starve Acre, which are able to "put a spell" on viewers with their "attitudes and strange sensibilities". > > > > The filmmaker continued: "It's not just horror; it ends up in a weird, off-kilter place. It can be uncomfortably quiet and sensitive, then suddenly it slaps you in your face with its oddballness. That was the aim of this film: to create a mood of nervousness. > > > > "Making an audience nervous results in a whole range of reactions: tears, screams or giggles. It's my idea of cathartic fun. > > > > "Starve Acre also taps into a timeless fear that feels more relevant than ever: the idea that returning home, to nature, and regressing into childhood, is a big mistake. > > > > "The film removes the nostalgic, rose-tinted glasses and shows us that there are dark things, long-buried superstitions, awaiting our return."

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  • Mike Leigh to Be Honored at Mediterrane Film Festival With Career Achievement Award
    variety.com Mike Leigh to Be Honored at Mediterrane Film Festival With Career Achievement Award

    Veteran director Mike Leigh will be honored at Malta's Mediterrane Film Festival with its Career Achievement Golden Bee Award.

    Mike Leigh to Be Honored at Mediterrane Film Festival With Career Achievement Award

    cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/movies/t/993157

    > > > > > > Mike Leigh, the veteran director of “Vera Drake,” “Another Year” and “Happy-Go-Lucky,” will be honored at Malta’s Mediterrane Film Festival with its Career Achievement Golden Bee Award. > > > > > > > > > > > Leigh will also host a masterclass at the festival, the second edition of which is taking place June 22 to 30 in Malta’s capital city of Valletta. The director, who has earned seven Oscar nominations and won the Cannes Film Festival Palme d’Or for 1993’s “Naked,” will be in conversation with Adrian Wootton, chief executive of Film London and the British Film Commission. > > > >

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  • Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson & Ralph Fiennes To Star In ‘28 Years Later’ For Danny Boyle And Sony Pictures
    deadline.com Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson & Ralph Fiennes To Star In ‘28 Years Later’ For Danny Boyle And Sony Pictures

    Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Jodie Comer and Ralph Fiennes have boarded Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later, a sequel movie to 28 Days Later.

    Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson & Ralph Fiennes To Star In ‘28 Years Later’ For Danny Boyle And Sony Pictures

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/10934427

    > > EXCLUSIVE: The new 28 Years Later trilogy from director Danny Boyle and Sony Pictures is gaining momentum, and some serious star power. Sources tell Deadline that Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes have boarded the first pic, a sequel to the original 28 Days Later. > > > > ... > > > > Deadline recently broke the news that the studio has already tapped Candyman director Nia DaCosta to helm the second part of the trilogy, and that the plan is to shoot both films back to back. As for the three newest cast members, the studio is clearly showing it means business, adding star power instead of going the lesser-known-actor route like in previous installments

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  • Avatar director James Cameron backs Marlow Studios
    www.bbc.com Avatar director James Cameron backs Marlow Studios

    The filmmaker says he will use the site as a base for his 3D movie technology company.

    Avatar director James Cameron backs Marlow Studios

    > Avatar and Titanic director James Cameron has backed proposals for a new film studio. > > In a letter to Buckinghamshire Council the Oscar winner told the authority he was impressed by the plans for Marlow Film Studios, which propose that the premises be built on the site of a former quarry. > > Mr Cameron said the studio could be a base for his company Lightstorm3D and potentially host a training centre for creatives working with 3D technology. > > In October councillors deferred their decision on the studio to 2024, despite the site being recommended for refusal by planning officers. > > The committee said it wanted more time to further consider greenbelt and highways issues linked to the A404.

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  • Seize Them! Review
    www.empireonline.com Seize Them!

    A medieval queen is overthrown and becomes a fugitive. Read the Empire review here.

    Seize Them!

    > When you consider the pantheon of comedies with exclamation marks in the title, the quality quotient runs from the sublime Safety Last! and — all hail the king — Airplane! to the piss-poor Attack Of The Killer Tomatoes! and Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot. Curtis Vowell’s Seize Them! sits somewhere in the middle of the pack, a sweary, enjoyable medieval romp that hits and misses in equal measure but gets by on appealing actors and its unapologetically puerile spirit.

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  • 28 Years Later: Everything We Know About the Sequel Trilogy
    www.joblo.com 28 Years Later: Everything We Know About the Sequel Trilogy

    We have compiled a list of everything we know about 28 Years Later, a trilogy of sequels to Danny Boyle and Alex Garland's 28 Days Later.

    28 Years Later: Everything We Know About the Sequel Trilogy

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/10503609

    > > Alex Garland is expected to write the scripts for all three of the 28 Years Later movies, but apparently didn’t want to direct them. Danny Boyle will only be directing the first one. For the second film, possibly titled 28 Years Later Part 2, he’ll be passing the helm over to Candyman and The Marvels director Nia DaCosta. Production on DaCosta’s sequel will begin immediately after Boyle wraps filming on his. They wanted to have the sequel director signed on before filming on the first movie begins, as they want to “make sure each director is on the same page in regard to the story while also having time to bring their own vision to life.” > > > > ... > > > > While doing the press rounds for Oppenheimer last year, Murphy told Collider, “I was talking to Danny Boyle recently, and I said, ‘Danny, we shot the movie at the end of 2000.’ So I think we’re definitely approaching the 28 Years Later. But like I’ve always said, I’m up for it. I’d love to do it. If Alex [Garland] thinks there’s a script in it and Danny wants to do it, I’d love to do it.“ Despite the fact that Murphy is willing to reprise the role of Jim and is on board 28 Years Later as an executive producer, we still haven’t heard confirmation that he’ll actually be in the movie. While talking to Josh Horowitz on the Happy Sad Confused podcast a couple months ago, Murphy said (with thanks to Coming Soon for the transcription), “It’s for (Danny Boyle and Alex Garland) to speak about, I suppose, but I think it’s been brewing for a while. The first movie was so important for me, as an actor. I love working with those guys. Alex has an idea. And Danny directing is just huge. Watch this space.” > > > > ... > > > > While we wait to hear for sure if Cillian Murphy is or isn’t in the movie, other casting rumors have been floating around. According to industry scooper Daniel Richtman, Jodie Comer (Killing Eve) and Charlie Hunnam (Sons of Anarchy) are in talks to play the lead roles. Details on the characters they might be playing are, of course, being kept under wraps. > > > > ... > > > > There was a bidding war over the distribution rights to the 28 Years Later trilogy, with Warner Bros. and Sony emerging as the final competitors – and Sony taking the win in the end. According to The Hollywood Reporter, “Each movie will have a budget in the $60 million range but it’s unclear how goalposts or compensation may have changed during the high-stakes negotiations. A theatrical release was of great import to the filmmakers.” Sony had an edge in this race due to the fact that it’s headed up by Tom Rothman, who used to be at Fox and worked with Boyle on eight different movies there. Release dates have not yet been announced.

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  • 'Shaun Of The Dead' returning to cinemas for 20th anniversary
    www.rollingstone.co.uk 'Shaun Of The Dead' returning to cinemas for 20th anniversary

    Shaun Of The Dead will return to cinemas later this year to mark the 20th anniversary of the iconic British comedy.

    'Shaun Of The Dead' returning to cinemas for 20th anniversary

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/10284037

    > > Shaun Of The Dead will return to cinemas later this year to mark the 20th anniversary of the iconic British comedy. > > > > The iconic comedy – which starred Simon Pegg and Nick Frost as two no-hopers navigating a zombie apocalypse in Britain – arrived in cinemas 20 years ago today (April 9). > > > > Now, it’s been confirmed that Universal will treat audiences to another slice of fried gold when the film returns to cinemas at an unconfirmed date later this week.

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  • Film sex and nudity to have age ratings tightened for under-15s, BBFC says
    www.bbc.com Film sex and nudity to have age ratings tightened for under-15s, BBFC says

    Scenes that were previously acceptable in films with a 12 rating are now more likely to be rated 15.

    Film sex and nudity to have age ratings tightened for under-15s, BBFC says

    > The BBFC has carried out its first major audience research for five years. > > Viewers now want "a more cautious approach" to sex scenes that are on the border of a 12/12A and a 15, it said. > > ... > > The research also indicated that audiences were happy for classification to be more lenient towards some sex references at the border of 15 and 18, especially in comic contexts > > ... > > The organisation also found that people are now more concerned about depictions of violence on screen. > > It said that in future, a higher rating may be required for violence across all age ratings. > > When it comes to drugs, the research suggested that audiences have become more relaxed about depictions of cannabis use and solvent misuse than before. > > The BBFC said it would therefore take a less restrictive approach to such content. > > Conversely, the survey suggested parents are concerned about the normalisation of bad language, especially terms with sexual or misogynistic connotations. Such language may now also require a higher age rating.

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  • Are we really living in Children of Men?
    www.newstatesman.com Are we really living in Children of Men?

    Britain feels like an even worse version of Alfonso Cuarón’s 2006 dystopian film.

    Are we really living in Children of Men?

    > Two new features show a Britain in the throes of social fissures that feel both uncanny and emblematic of existential threat. There’s The Kitchen, directed by Kibwe Tavares and Daniel Kaluuya, which takes gentrification to its logical conclusion as London’s final social housing estate struggles to survive. And The End We Start From, directed by Mahalia Belo, showing a single mother’s quest to raise her child while the nation is overcome by biblical flooding, uneasily reminding audiences of Britain’s dilapidated and dangerous infrastructure. But the modern cinematic benchmark for this apocalyptic turn remains Alfonso Cuarón’s Children of Men (2006). > > ... > > As the years have passed since Children of Men’s release in 2006, it has only felt more real. Cuarón said that he simply looked at the visible trends in Britain at the beginning of the 21st century and predicted where they would go. While it hardly disturbed the box office upon release, almost 20 years later, Children of Men is widely cited as one of the best films of the Noughties. With its themes of ecological collapse and pandemic disease, the film became a cultural touchpoint during the Covid lockdowns, as scores of online commentaries declared: “It’s like living in Children of Men.” Were they wrong? > > “The truth was,” writes Danny Dorling in Shattered Nation: Inequality and the Geography of a Failing State (2022), “the state was falling apart, with rising resentment in the ‘peripheral regions and nations’, a fall in Conservative support in the Home Counties, a tacit acceptance of huge levels of inequality as normal, and a general floundering about in the dark as one crisis morphed into the next.” Dorling, a geographer, applies his deceptively simple (but revealing) mode of analysis to Britain’s national decline, drawing on empirical studies to argue that the nation “shatters” when it fails to realise its full, messy existence. For Dorling, Britain’s high point of equality was 1973, and the country has been in free-fall ever since. > > Speaking to Dorling, you sense his hope that things have to get better despite the observable reality around us. “I actually think it’s quite likely, because, historically, when a state in Europe does this badly and gets to this point, normally things do turn around. Unfortunately, it’s very slowly, so it could take 20 or 30 years, so it could feel quite bad for some time to come.

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  • The Zone of Interest becomes first British movie to win best international film Oscar
    www.theguardian.com The Zone of Interest becomes first British movie to win best international film Oscar

    Adapted from Martin Amis’ novel and directed by Jonathan Glazer, the Auschwitz-set, German-language film is also up for best picture

    The Zone of Interest becomes first British movie to win best international film Oscar

    > The Zone of Interest has won the best international film Oscar at the Academy Awards, which are currently taking place in Los Angeles. > > An adaptation of Martin Amis’ novel of the same title, and directed by British film-maker Jonathan Glazer, The Zone of Interest has largely German and Polish dialogue and therefore qualified for the award. It was the third British film to be nominated in the category (following the predominantly Welsh-language films Hedd Wyn in 1993 and Solomon & Gaenor in 2000), and the first to win.

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  • Glasgow’s disastrous Wonka character inspires horror film
    www.theguardian.com Glasgow’s disastrous Wonka character inspires horror film

    A villain devised for the catastrophic Willy’s Chocolate Experience, who makes sweets and lives in walls, is to become the subject of a new horror movie

    Glasgow’s disastrous Wonka character inspires horror film

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/8721810

    > > Yet the Wonka experience may yet enjoy its moment in the cinematic sun. A new movie from Kaledonia Pictures is being rushed into production to capitalise on the global infamy enjoyed by the story. > > > > The horror film will focus on The Unknown, a character devised – possibly not by a human – for the Glasgow show. Actor Paul Connell, who played Wonka in the experience, said the script was “15 pages of AI-generated gibberish,” and introduced the “Unknown [who] is an evil chocolate maker who lives in the walls.” > > > > ... > > > > The Kaledonia movie follows an illustrator and his wife who are haunted by the death of their son, Charlie. They attempt to escape their grief in the Scottish Highlands where “an unknowable evil awaits them”. > > > > Warner Bros, which owns the film rights to Roald Dahl’s character – but not to The Unknown – has yet to comment. > > > > Recent horror versions of children’s classics such as Winnie-the-Pooh have not met with positive notices.

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  • UK indie films will ‘die’ without fiscal aid, Ken Loach producer says
    www.theguardian.com UK indie films will ‘die’ without fiscal aid, Ken Loach producer says

    Rebecca O’Brien, award-winning collaborator on Loach's films, raised urgent warnings at a select committee inquiry into the industry

    UK indie films will ‘die’ without fiscal aid, Ken Loach producer says

    The Bafta-winning producer behind Ken Loach’s acclaimed films has warned that the UK indie film sector will “die” without additional fiscal support.

    Appearing in front of a session of the Culture, Media and Sport Committee’s inquiry into British film and high-end TV, Rebecca O’Brien – who runs the production company Sixteen Films with Loach and screenwriter Paul Laverty – raised urgent concerns about the state of the industry.

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  • ‘The worst film ever made’: how Sex Lives of the Potato Men broke British cinema
    www.theguardian.com ‘The worst film ever made’: how Sex Lives of the Potato Men broke British cinema

    When the puerile comedy bombed, the film-makers blamed the critics and the Tories blamed the UK Film Council. Twenty years on, we reassess the legacy of a cinematic pariah whose champions include Stewart Lee and Mike Leigh

    ‘The worst film ever made’: how Sex Lives of the Potato Men broke British cinema

    > When the puerile comedy bombed, the film-makers blamed the critics and the Tories blamed the UK Film Council. Twenty years on, we reassess the legacy of a cinematic pariah whose champions include Stewart Lee and Mike Leigh

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  • What did you see?: February 2024

    Seen any good films lately? Then let us know.

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  • Zombie Sequel ’28 Years Later’ Lands at Sony (Exclusive)
    www.hollywoodreporter.com Zombie Sequel ’28 Years Later’ Lands at Sony (Exclusive)

    Danny Boyle and Alex Garland are behind the long-gestating '28 Days Later' sequel, which could launch a trilogy of zombie films and may return Cillian Murphy to his breakout role.

    Zombie Sequel ’28 Years Later’ Lands at Sony (Exclusive)

    > 28 Years Later, the hot package from director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland, has landed at Sony. > > The Culver City-based studio has come out on top after a protracted bidding war to win the rights to the sequel package to the 2002 horror classic 28 Days Later. > > Director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland have reunited to write and direct the sequel, which also comes with a Part 2, to be written by Garland. Boyle would only direct the first project, with the sequel’s director to be determined at a later stage. Cillian Murphy, whose career was launched thanks to the original movie, is also returning, as an executive producer. The Oppenheimer star could also possibly act in the project, although details are being quarantined.

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  • What did you see?: January 2024

    Yes, a little late in the day but I've watched a lot this month and will work back through the list.

    5
  • Aneurin Barnard, Hayley Atwell, Jack Lowden Join Duncan Jones’ Science Fiction Movie ‘Rogue Trooper’ (EXCLUSIVE)
    variety.com Aneurin Barnard, Hayley Atwell, Jack Lowden Join Duncan Jones’ Science Fiction Movie ‘Rogue Trooper’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Aneurin Barnard, Hayley Atwell and Jack Lowden lead the cast of science fiction movie 'Rogue Trooper,' written and directed by Duncan Jones.

    Aneurin Barnard, Hayley Atwell, Jack Lowden Join Duncan Jones’ Science Fiction Movie ‘Rogue Trooper’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    > Aneurin Barnard, Hayley Atwell and Jack Lowden lead the cast of science fiction movie “Rogue Trooper,” written and directed by Duncan Jones, whose credits include “Moon,” “Source Code,” “Warcraft” and “Mute.” > > The animated film, which is being created with Epic’s 3D tool Unreal Engine 5, was adapted by Jones from the comic book published by 2000 AD, home to “Judge Dredd,” “Halo Jones” and “Sláine.” “Rogue Trooper,” produced by Rebellion and Liberty Films, has wrapped principal photography at Rebellion Film Studios in the U.K. The film is set to be finished next year. > > Barnard (“The Goldfinch,” “Dunkirk”) stars as the eponymous Rogue Trooper. Cast alongside him are Atwell (“Captain America: The First Avenger,” “Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One”), Lowden (“Slow Horses,” “Dunkirk”), Daryl McCormack (“Bad Sisters,” “Good Luck to You Leo Grande”) and Reece Shearsmith (“Inside No. 9,” “Saltburn”). > > ... > > “Rogue Trooper” tells the story of 19, a “Genetic Infantryman,” who finds himself the sole-survivor of an invasion force. Desperate to track down the traitor who sold him and his comrades out, the super soldier is accompanied by three killed-in-action squad mates, whose personalities have been stored in his gun, helmet and rucksack. > >The “Rogue Trooper” comic book was created by artist Dave Gibbons (“Watchmen,” “Kingsman”) and writer Gerry Finley-Day (“Dan Dare”). > > Jones said: “2000 AD offers a very different flavor of comic action: Political and brutal at times, but always with a Pythonesque twinkle in the eye. ‘Dredd’ (2012) was a taste of what 2000 AD has to offer and now we get to show the world another side of the beast. It is a genuine privilege to be given the opportunity to make ‘Rogue Trooper.'”

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  • Netflix Just Quietly Released the Best Dystopian Sci-Fi Movie of the Year [The Kitchen]
    www.inverse.com Netflix Just Quietly Released the Best Dystopian Sci-Fi Movie of the Year

    Daniel Kaluuya's 'The Kitchen' buries an intimate communal drama in the heart of a futurist dystopia.

    Netflix Just Quietly Released the Best Dystopian Sci-Fi Movie of the Year

    > The film is something of a big deal, despite its unheralded Netflix premiere. The Kitchen marks Daniel Kaluuya’s (Nope, Judas and the Black Messiah) directorial debut, alongside short film director Kibwe Tavares. Kaluuya also co-wrote the film with Gangs of London’s Joe Murtagh, cementing a vision of dystopian, near-future London alongside an unconventional tale of found family. It’s Blokamp-esque in design, but is centered on Britain’s Black diaspora. It’s a shame such a unique film can’t be seen on the biggest screen possible, but it at least deserves to be seen by as many eyes as possible.

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  • Zombies Remain Unkillable: Danny Boyle and Alex Garland Hope to Launch a New Trilogy with 28 Years Later

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/6701660

    > > I’ll save you the math: It has not (yet) been 28 years since 28 Days Later. The 2002 movie, directed by Danny Boyle and written by Alex Garland, was a surprise hit for many reasons, including the facts that a) the speedy zombies were terrifying and b) people really enjoy watching Cillian Murphy on film (see also: Oppenheimer). > > > > Now, the writer and director are hoping to launch a whole new trilogy of zombie films with 28 Years Later. > > > > Very little is known about this potential film or trilogy, though The Hollywood Reporter notes that the creators are “expected to hit studios, streamers and other potential buyers later this week.” Boyle (Trainspotting) will direct at least the first film, and Garland—now also a well-regarded director (Annihilation)—is set to write all three films. > > > > Murphy is not officially part of the new project, at least not yet, though he has spoken about the possibility of reteaming with Boyle and Garland. When NME asked in 2022 if the gang might get back together, Murphy said, “[E]very time I do bump into Danny or Alex I always mention it. Because I showed it to my kids recently, some Halloween about four or five years ago, and they loved it. It really stands up, which is amazing for a film that’s 20 years old. So yeah, I love the idea and it’s very appealing to me.”

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  • Aardman Animation Only Has Enough Clay For One More Movie
    collider.com Aardman Animation Only Has Enough Clay For One More Movie

    Aardman is the stop-motion studio responsible for 'Wallace & Gromit' and 'Chicken Run.'

    Aardman Animation Only Has Enough Clay For One More Movie

    > Aardman Animation has found itself in a situation that’s not as malleable as the clay they used for their films. In fact, that happens to be the issue they’re facing: a lack of clay. Newclay Products, which creates a specialty clay unavailable anywhere else in the world, closed its doors in March, leaving Aardman to look for another solution, as reported by The Telegraph. > > The makers of Wallace and Gromit and Chicken Run: Dawn of the Nugget scrambled to buy the last of Newclay Products’ stock to at least finish the films they already had in development. Valerie Dearing, one of the directors of Newclay Products, said, “Aardman bought a lot of our remaining stock of Newplast to keep them going. They got what they said was two years’ worth. It came to about 40 boxes, which must have been around 400 kg.” The report stated that Aardman has enough clay for one more movie, putting future products from the studio on hold until they can find another supplier. It is unknown at this time what the long-term impacts will be on the company.

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  • Loch Ness: They Created a Monster review – the hunters who wouldn’t let Nessie go
    www.theguardian.com Loch Ness: They Created a Monster review – the hunters who wouldn’t let Nessie go

    Documentary about the monster-hunting frenzy at Loch Ness in the 1970s and 80s is full of intrigue and eccentric characters

    Loch Ness: They Created a Monster review – the hunters who wouldn’t let Nessie go

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/4279877

    > > Here’s one for Nessie enthusiasts and cryptozoologists everywhere: a documentary about the monster-hunting frenzy at Loch Ness in the 1970s and 80s. “It was a race! It was zoological Mount Everest!” remembers one hunter. Someone else recalls reading that discovering the Loch Ness monster would be bigger than the moon landing. There’s even an old clip of David Attenborough on Michael Parkinson’s chat show discussing – with not a trace of scepticism – the search for a creature lurking in the deep dark waters. > > > > What strikes you seeing Loch Ness in the film – as it does in real-life – is what a whopper it is: 23 miles long and over 700ft at its deepest point. The monster hunters who made the pilgrimage to the Highlands in the 70s split broadly into two types, according to one of them. There were the army veterans, bored with life, and the hippie dropouts. Frank Searle was in the former camp, a cockney ex-soldier who parked his caravan on the shore and took more pictures of Nessie than anyone else in history, or so he claimed (they were later exposed as fakes). Searle did a bunk after a nasty incident involving a Molotov cocktail and a rival hunter. (Searle denied any involvement in the incident.) > > > > By the late 70s, there were more monster enthusiasts than midges by the loch. Tim Dinsdale shot famous footage in 1960, and spent the better part of 20 years trying to get a better sighting. Robert Rines, an American, captured the image of an underwater “flipper” in 1974. A 20-strong team arrived from Japan. It’s a lively, entertaining story, full of intrigue and eccentric characters. Personally, I would have preferred a bit of a broader sweep, more history of Nessie sightings and folklore. Perhaps something too on why creatures of myth and legend capture our imaginations; a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it interview with writer Marina Warner is bit of a wasted opportunity. > > > > • Loch Ness: They Created a Monster is released on 10 November in UK cinemas.

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  • V The Vendetta - Remember Remember, the Fifth of November (HD)

    cross-posted from: https://lemmus.org/post/1414782

    > >Guy Fawkes Night, also known as Guy Fawkes Day, Bonfire Night and Fireworks Night, is an annual commemoration observed on 5 November, primarily in Great Britain, involving bonfires and fireworks displays. > > --- > > >Traditional English rhyme celebrating the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, 1605, and associated with Guy Fawkes Night in the UK. > > The Fifth of November (Guy Fawkes Night Poem) Lyrics > > - Remember, remember! > - The fifth of November, > - The Gunpowder treason and plot; > - I know of no reason > - Why the Gunpowder treason > - Should ever be forgot! > - Guy Fawkes and his companions > - Did the scheme contrive, > - To blow the King and Parliament > - All up alive. > - Threescore barrels, laid below, > - To prove old England's overthrow. > - But, by God's providence, him they catch, > - With a dark lantern, lighting a match! > - A stick and a stake > - For King James's sake! > - If you won't give me one, > - I'll take two, > - The better for me, > - And the worse for you. > - A rope, a rope, to hang the Pope, > - A penn'orth of cheese to choke him, > - A pint of beer to wash it down, > - And a jolly good fire to burn him. > - Holloa, boys! holloa, boys! make the bells ring! > - Holloa, boys! holloa boys! God save the King! > - Hip, hip, hooor-r-r-ray! > > >Traditional English rhyme celebrating the failure of the Gunpowder Plot, 1605, and associated with Guy Fawkes Night in the UK. > > > ---- > Fireworks scene: > > Remember Remember the 5th of November - V for Vendetta > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RS2HLC0sipA

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  • The Bystanders review – British parallel-universe comedy of invisible guardian angels
    www.theguardian.com The Bystanders review – British parallel-universe comedy of invisible guardian angels

    A micro-budget and scrappy energy add charm to this quirky sci-fi tale in which unremarkable people watch over their charges

    The Bystanders review – British parallel-universe comedy of invisible guardian angels

    > Peter (Scott Haran) is a former child chess prodigy who these days excels at nothing much in particular, except perhaps his ability to blend into the background. A birthday card at his office is handed to him to sign – for his own birthday. None of his colleagues know who he is, and the card is crammed with polite, anodyne messages. But he discovers that there’s one arena in which his anonymity might be a boon rather than a liability: he is recruited into the world of Bystanding, a parallel universe filled with invisible guardian types whose job is to imperceptibly guide or nudge their charges into making better life choices. They are all, in their own ways, as unremarkable as Peter, hence their selection for bystander duty. > > There’s a scrappy energy to this British sci-fi comedy that offsets its micro-budget limitations. The premise is part of a cinematic family tree of quirky, metaphysical science fiction that includes the likes of Cold Souls, The Adjustment Bureau and Another Earth. There’s also a strong strand of UK comedy in the DNA, recalling material like Red Dwarf and The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy in its desire to juxtapose the mundane, trivial annoyances of life with a more expansive sense of the universe. There’s something neat too about the film’s focus on life’s quiet losers, in an era when the loudest “main character energy” personalities seem predestined for rewards in the attention economy. It almost feels like a throwback to the loose mumblecore movement of the early 2000s. > > Filmed mainly on location in and around east London, this modest film clearly doesn’t have a lot of cash to splash, but sets out to prove that you don’t need much money to have a reasonably interesting idea and make a diverting film. Sci-fi is often thought of as an expensive genre, but it doesn’t have to be; this micro-budget effort proves that leaning in to charmingly cheap SFX can prove just as engaging – or even more so – than throwing billions at the screen to create a soulless churn of random pixels in the service of the latest cookie cutter superhero adventure.

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  • Doctor Jekyll review – gives Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing a run for their money
    lwlies.com Doctor Jekyll review – gives Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing a run for their money

    Hammer Horror returns with a genderflipped take on Robert Louis Stevenson's iconic novel, starring Eddie Izzard as a leading figure of the pharmaceutical industry with a dark secret.

    Doctor Jekyll review – gives Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing a run for their money

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/3800489

    > > Hammer Horror returns with a genderflipped take on Robert Louis Stevenson's iconic novel, starring Eddie Izzard as a leading figure of the pharmaceutical industry with a dark secret. > > > > In a delicious example of nominative determinism, British horror powerhouse Hammer Film Productions was recently acquired by theatre producer John Gore. He will oversee a revival of schlocky, low-budget British horror – starting with a new adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1886 Gothic novella Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. It is well-worn territory for the studio, including Hammer staple Terence Fisher’s The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll (1960), and Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde (1971) directed by Roy Ward Baker. > > > > The latter version rode on a wave of gender-swapped horror remakes, playing to the suspense potential of an oh-so-innocent female secretly veiling the monster inside. As with bigger-budget horror movies from Hitchcock’s Psycho to De Palma’s Dressed to Kill, Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde played to the most terrifying trope of all – the man whose alter-ego is a woman. It’s important to have all of this in mind when watching Joe Stephenson’s Doctor Jekyll, which goes one step further than previous iterations by changing the genders of both Jekyll and Hyde, now Nina and Rachel. > > > > ... > > > > Doctor Jekyll revives a missing element of British cinema – you can see the walls shaking, the cheapness of the props, the hamminess of the acting. But that’s what Hammer is all about, the sort of horror that has you laughing one minute and throwing your popcorn in the air in fright the next. Izzard also subverts the fear of gender that has long haunted horror cinema by both playing to and away from the ongoing ‘trans scare’. It looks like Hammer has returned from the dead.

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  • Starve Acre: Matt Smith's new movie debuts with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating
    www.digitalspy.com Matt Smith's new movie debuts with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating

    Folk horror Starve Acre also stars Rings of Power's Morfydd Clark.

    Matt Smith's new movie debuts with 100% Rotten Tomatoes rating

    cross-posted from: https://feddit.uk/post/3785127

    > > Matt Smith and Morfydd Clark's upcoming film Starve Acre has debuted with a perfect Rotten Tomatoes score. > > > > Premiered at this year's BFI London Film Festival, this folk horror from writer-director Daniel Kokotajlo (Apostasy) is set in rural Yorkshire, England, in the 1970s. There, the idyllic country life of couple Richard and Juliette takes a sinister turn when their son Owen (Arthur Shaw) starts acting out of character. > > > > .... > > > > While the film — an adaptation of the 2019 novel of the same name by Andrew Michael Hurley — doesn't have a wider release date just yet, it sure seems to have wowed critics who have managed to see it. It currently sits at a score of 100% out of 5 reviews on review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, though this is likely to change once more reviews are in.

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  • What did you see?: October 2023

    Sorry, bit late with this. I should be more on the ball going forward.

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  • Michael Caine Announces Retirement From Acting
    people.com Michael Caine Announces Retirement From Acting

    Sir Michael Caine announced his retirement from acting on BBC Radio 4 show Today on Saturday. The actor, whose final movie was 'The Great Escaper,' is set to publish a book in November

    Michael Caine Announces Retirement From Acting

    cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/8722763

    > Archive link: https://archive.ph/xrzxY > > > Sir Michael Caine is retiring from acting. > > > > The 90-year-old actor confirmed his retirement — which comes after the Oct. 6 release of his latest, and now final, film The Great Escaper — in a new radio interview on Saturday. > > > > "I keep saying I'm going to retire. Well, I am now,” Caine told BBC Radio 4’s Today show. > > > > "I've figured, I've had a picture where I've played the lead and it's got incredible reviews. The only parts I’m likely to get now are old men,” the acting legend explained. “…And I thought, well I might as well leave with all this — what have I got to do to beat this?” > > > Caine’s retirement announcement comes after he hinted at retiring in an interview with The Telegraph last month, where he discussed his new role in The Great Escaper, his age and said he was "sort of" retired. > > > Caine shared during his latest BBC Radio 4 interview that he believes it’s important old age is portrayed in movies, offering that as part of the reason he has kept acting up until now. > > > When asked if he would ever return to acting, Caine replied, “No. There’ll be writing. I’ll write another book sometime because I so enjoyed writing.” > >

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