Author: Alton Williams

  • For The Love Of Film: BAFTA Finalists

    For The Love Of Film: BAFTA Finalists

    For The Love Of Film: BAFTA Finalists. BAFTA has announced the finalists for its second annual ‘For the Love of Film’ competition. Nine people from across the UK have been shortlisted by a special BAFTA jury, having been nominated by the British public for their exceptional contributions to their communities through film.

    People across the UK were encouraged to submit For The Love Of Film applications on behalf of those who they felt should be recognised for their remarkable contributions to film within their communities. Nearly 300 applications and testimonials were considered by a panel of industry experts including BAFTA-winning director Amma Asante, broadcaster Edith Bowman, four-time BAFTA-winning writer/director Paul Greengrass, filmmaker and content creator Jack Howard, and Andrew Orr of BAFTA’s Film Committee. 

    Amanda Berry OBE, Chief Executive of BAFTA, said: “We’re proud to shine a light on these dedicated individuals from across the country, people who do what they do purely ‘for the love of film’. Now in the second year of the competition, so many of the people who have been brought to our attention have demonstrated an incredible passion for film in their communities, which reinforces our belief that film plays a vital role in our everyday lives. I can’t wait to meet the winners at the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 2 February.”

    The two For The Love Of Film winners, to be announced in January 2020, will be invited along with their guest to join BAFTA and EE at the nation’s biggest celebration of film, the EE British Academy Film Awards on Sunday 2 February, before enjoying dinner and an overnight stay at the Savoy Hotel in London.

    In the first year of BAFTA’s ‘For the Love of Film’ competition, the winners were Dan Ellis, founder and managing director of Jam Jar Cinema and Iain MacColl, senior operator at Screen Machine.

    ‘For the Love of Film’ Competition Finalists:

    Elizabeth Banks (Brighton) is the producer of Oska Bright Film Festival, the world’s biggest festival of short films made by and for people with learning disabilities, autism and additional needs. Lizzie has overseen the development of the festival from a one-day event to an international four-day celebration of films that show a different outlook on life. Oska Bright is planned, managed and delivered by a learning-disabled team supported by Lizzie. Through her efforts the festival is funded by the BFI and has BAFTA qualifying status. She secures screenings for films around the country with partners such as London Short Film Festival, Encounters and Aesthetica and lobbies TV and film execs to make the industry fully inclusive. Oska Bright 2019 screened 99 films from 17 countries. Lizzie has just joined the ICO’s Women in Leadership programme and is ambitious for the festival and its film makers.

    Pat Church (Suffolk) has been at the heart of the Abbeygate Cinema for over 50 years. Joining as a projectionist in the 1960s, when he was just 19, Pat has seen the cinema through 12 different owners and four near-closures, weathering it all and pushing his beloved cinema to new heights with seemingly boundless enthusiasm. After the first threat of closure in 1975, Pat refused to back down. The owners at the time were convinced that home video spelled the end of the Abbeygate; however, Pat felt strongly that watching a film in a cinema is something special because “it envelops you into the screen,” and you just “can’t recreate that at home.” Pat wrote an updated business plan convincing the owners to give the cinema one more chance, was promoted to manager, and has been indispensable to the cinema ever since. Now semi-retired, Pat is still active in the Abbeygate’s operation and embraces the title of ‘casual manager.’ His personal, caring and individual service has led to committed staff and a staunchly loyal customer and membership base measured in the thousands. It’s safe to say that Pat’s dream of turning this ‘back street theatre’ into an important part of the community has come true.

    Martin Fol and Janet Dunn (Liverpool) fund and operate the Plaza cinema in Liverpool, a volunteer-run community cinema that offers dynamic, film-based education programmes to schools, the voluntary sector and the general public. As well as screenings at the Plaza, Janet and Martin’s work includes running film projects for young people aged 13-19, impressing the power film has to help make sense of the world they live in. These courses train young people in film production, giving them the opportunity to experience the magic of having their work shown on the big screen of the Plaza itself. Dementia-friendly screenings are also offered at the Plaza, with programming designed to trigger memories—showing films like The Pajama Game and There’s No Business Like Show Business with lights left on low, easy wheelchair access, volume adjustment and an interval featuring free tea and biscuits. As a result of inclusive programming, the Plaza Cinema benefits from a wealth of volunteer support and the devotion of its local community members

    David Gillam (Wales) works to provide his community with a more diverse range of films with screenings and festivals designed to bring world cinema to the people in Wales. David screens films from all corners of the globe in every venue he can secure, from cities to the heart of rural farming communities. David founded the Wales One World film festival in 2001, which he directs and programmes himself. WOW, the longest running film festival in Wales, celebrates the riches of world cinema, bringing an eclectic, intriguing, and moving selection of films from around the globe to cinemas across Wales, including Aberystwyth, Mold, Swansea and more.  WOW presents a selection of the very best in world cinema – and sometimes a film from Wales too. Outside of the festival, David continues to make world film accessible to communities of all sizes in Wales through screenings and workshops, often with group discussions and Q&As to accompany them.

    Jane Mayo (Argyll) is a chair of the Community Trust operating Campbeltown Picture House, the UK’s oldest continually opened cinema. Jane has not only led the local community to raise over £6m to save this historic gem but also generated a sustainable programme of self-funding activity to ensure this unique cinematic and architectural treasure will endure, serving the community as well as attracting visitors from all over the globe. Jane achieved this feat in a remote corner of the UK (with a population of only 6000), inspired by the power film has to motivate, educate, inspire and entertain an entire community, not only in the town itself but the wider Kintyre diaspora. Because of Jane’s passion, commitment and dedication to making this project a reality, the community’s “wee Picture House” has been brought back from the brink of dereliction to be once more at the heart of the community.

    Marlon Palmer (London) has spent 21 years working to get BAME-made films exhibited in the UK by self-funding screenings and cultivating Black audiences, creating a sustainable exhibition and marketing platform for black filmmakers and giving the UK ethnic-minority public access to these films His work has both allowed black filmmakers to screen their films in cinemas and provided the ethnic-minority public access to films they wouldn’t otherwise be able to see. His efforts have even stretched beyond London to organise screenings in Bristol, Birmingham and Leeds to reach as many communities as possible. Perhaps Marlon’s most consistently impactful work is achieved through his film club, The Kush Film Boutique, which has screened black films on a consistent monthly basis since 2004, bringing BAME filmmakers, actors and members of the public together to foster a dynamic, enthusiastic community of fellow film lovers with a space tailored specifically to them.

    Angie Wordingham (Norfolk) is the assistant manager at the Cromer Regal Movieplex. Having worked there for 39 years and counting, she started cleaning at the age of 12, ushering at the age of 14 and worked her way up through the ranks. She takes careful care to get to know all of the regular customers, often to the point of knowing them by name. A large number of regular customers at Cromer Regal Movieplex are elderly; Angie takes great pride in personal care of each individual, encouraging some of the lonelier customers to keep coming to experience new films, have a chat on the way in and get out of the house. Not only does she bring a smile to every customer who enters the cinema, but she also takes a great interest in the young people who work there, usually through their studies. Several of her staff have hopes to enter the film industry in various capacities and Angie is enthusiastic in encouraging their dreams.

    Lorraine Lake Nepstad (London) is 87 years old and for the last five years has been organising a monthly film club for the residents of her residential independent living retirement home. Lorraine has organised a committee to select films for the viewers by vote. At Christmas and Easter they do a cake and mulled wine sale to raise money to pay for the films and Lorraine has ensured the success of the cine club as she has donated herself to keep the club running. Her energy and enthusiasm are a contributing factor to the residential home where she brightens the lives of those less able with her love of cinema. She is true inspiration to her family, friends and those who live in her community.

    Katie Brandwood and Catriona Mahmoud (London) bring affordable film to South Norwood–an area of south London that had no cinema for years–by taking over a school hall and opening a fully inclusive community cinema club. Screen25 is a twice-weekly community led cinema showing the latest independent and mainstream films enhanced by Q+As and panel discussions. Founded in 2015 by Katie under a different name, Screen25 was originally a monthly film club that quickly grew into a weekly film club and was endorsed by the BFI and the Prince’s Trust. With accessibility at its core, Screen25 hosts regular ‘Pay As You Feel’ screenings so nobody in the community is precluded from watching excellent cinema. In October of 2019, Screen25 was threatened with closure after larger cinemas opened nearby. Nevertheless, Katie and Catriona managed to save the club from closure just one month later by organising a rousing campaign to enlist membership subscriptions. Now, members pay a monthly subscription of just £15 to see all the films shown by Screen25 they wish.

    The EE British Academy Film Awards take place on Sunday 2 February. The ceremony will be broadcast exclusively on BBC One and BBC One HD in the UK and broadcast in all major territories around the world. On the night, www.bafta.org will feature red carpet highlights, photography and winner’s interviews, as well as dedicated coverage on its social channels including Facebook (/BAFTA), Twitter and Instagram (@BAFTA / #EEBAFTAs). 

    Learn more about the competition and the short-listed candidates on BAFTA’s website.

  • Fan Art Judged By Director Quentin Tarantino

    Fan Art Judged By Director Quentin Tarantino

    Quentin Tarantino has personally selected the winning entries of a nationwide fan art creative brief celebrating the home entertainment release of Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood in the UK. The brief, to produce a 60s style poster for the ninth Tarantino film, was launched in tandem with artist community website PosterSpy, where entrants competed for a cash reward and the approval of the film’s esteemed director.

    PosterSpy invited fan art lovers and artists to create a poster evoking the style of 1969 and the golden era of Hollywood film posters of that era. Entrants were encouraged to draw on the film’s style and historical backdrop with a nod to the golden era of cinema and how film posters were put together in 1969, using main stars Brad Pitt (Cliff Booth), Leonardo Di Caprio (Rick Dalton) and Margot Robbie (Sharon Tate).

    The winners as judged by Quentin Tarantino are…

    1st place – Rico Jr

    1st place – Rico Jr

    “So honored that my poster was chosen as the first place of the contest by Mr. Tarantino himself. The theme of Hollywood and cinema’s making through his latest film obviously echo in me and I wanted to propose something. A piece that stands out from the traditional models while retaining this retro vibe and bringing my minimalist touch to it.”

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/RicoJrCrea
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/julienricojr/?hl=en

    2nd place - Nuno Sarnadas

    2nd place – Nuno Sarnadas

    “I have been a Tarantino fan since “Pulp Fiction”, and this still is my favourite movie of all time. Tarantino’s definitely one of my favourite directors and having him pick my piece is something I would never expect in a million years. “Once Upon a Time…” is a wonderful piece of cinema, and it’s imagery is truly inspiring. For the piece I followed the brief’s hint and researched lots of posters from that time period. I just put together the elements I found worked together the best, and made a composition that would fit the late 1960’s in the most perfect way.”

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/nunosarnadas
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/darkdesignpt/?hl=en

    3rd place - Pete Lloyd

    3rd place – Pete Lloyd

    “Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction came out when I was a teenager and were unlike anything I’d seen before. Along with True Romance (which I’ve seen so many times I could probably quote the dialogue back to you in its entirety!) these films made a huge impression on me and I’ve been a massive Tarantino fan ever since. So to have my poster chosen by the man himself is really special, a great honour. The brief provided solid art direction and I spent quite a lot of time studying iconic late sixties poster art by greats such as Robert McGinnis and Bob Peak for inspiration. With the floating vignettes, negative space, typography and spiral composition I did my best to evoke the feel of the period and setting in my own style.”

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/PeteDLloyd
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/petelloydillustrator/?hl=en

    You can view all the fan art submissions to the PosterSpy brief here: 
    https://posterspy.com/creative-brief/once-upon-a-time-in-hollywood-brief/

    Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time…in Hollywood visits 1969 Los Angeles, where everything is changing, as TV star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his long-time stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt) make their way around an industry they hardly recognize anymore.

    The ninth film from the writer-director features “one of the greatest casts of all time” (Jake Hamilton, FOX TV ) —including Margot Robbie, Julia Butters, Margaret Qualley, Timothy Olyphant, Luke Perry, Austin Butler, Dakota Fanning, Emile Hirsch, Bruce Dern and Al Pacino—and multiple storylines in a tribute to the final moments of Hollywood’s golden age. ONCE UPON A TIME…IN HOLLYWOOD is now available to download & keep and own on 4K Ultra HD™, Blu-ray™ and DVD.

  • London Critics To Honour Aardman

    London Critics To Honour Aardman

    The UK’s leading film critics today announced that Aardman will receive a special honour at their 40th anniversary awards ceremony on 30th January. The London Critics’ Circle Film Awards presented by Pearl Pictures Productions will be held at the May Fair Hotel.

    “The London critics are huge fans of Aardman’s work,” says Rich Cline, chair of the Critics’ Circle Film Awards. “We have been speaking for years about giving them some sort of special recognition, and this year is perfect, with our 40th anniversary coinciding with Wallace and Gromit’s 30th. Plus of course the huge success of this year’s Shaun the Sheep adventure Farmageddon, which we loved beyond reason.”

    In response, Aardman cofounder David Sproxton said: “It’s wonderful to receive recognition from people who watch literally hundreds of films a year and earn their living writing about them. When a film is released, you are never sure what the reaction of the critics will be, so it’s lovely to be acknowledged positively by them with this award.”

    Based in Bristol, Aardman is famous for creating much-loved and often riotously entertaining characters including Wallace and Gromit, Shaun the Sheep and Morph. Their films have won four Oscars over the years, and they are also a creative powerhouse behind cutting-edge content for advertising partners, digital platforms, games developers and live experiences both in Britain and abroad. Cofounded by Peter Lord and David Sproxton in 1976, the company is now owned by its employees.

    As teens, Lord and Sproxton came up with the animated superhero Aardman, who was purchased by the BBC’s Vision Onseries and gave their animation studio its name. The follow-up series Take Hart introduced their first clay character Morph, and they went on to develop their technique with work on Channel 4. In 1985, Nick Park met Lord and Sproxton while studying at the National Film and Television School, where he created the cheese-loving inventor Wallace and his faithful dog Gromit for the Oscar-nominated short A Grand Day Out (1990), which was pipped for that Oscar by his Aardman shortCreature Comforts (1989). The second Wallace and Gromit film The Wrong Trousers (1993) won the Oscar, as did their third adventure A Close Shave (1995), which also introduced Shaun the Sheep.

    Feature films produced by Aardman include the acclaimed Chicken Run (2000), the Oscar-winning Wallace and Gromit feature The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005), the Oscar-nominated The Pirates! In an Adventure With Scientists!,AShaun the Sheep Movie (2015), Early Man (2018) and this year’s A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019). Production is currently underway on a Chicken Run sequel. Along with movies, Aardman developed the Bafta-nominated console game 11-11: Memories Retold; the StorySign app, which helps teach deaf children to read; and a 4D theme park experience at Efteling in the Netherlands.

    In addition to this special 40th Anniversary Award, the Critics’ Circle will present British film icons Sally Potter and Sandy Powell with the Dilys Powell Award for Excellence in Cinema at this year’s ceremony alongside the regular line-up of awards in various international and British/Irish categories. A full list of nominations and special awards will be announced on Tuesday 17th December at The May Fair Hotel by British actors Jenn Murray and John Dagleish.

    The 40th London Critics’ Circle Film Awards presented by Pearl Pictures Productions will be held on Thursday 30th January at the May Fair Hotel, part of the Edwardian Hotels London group. The red carpet event is also sponsored by the May Fair Hotel and Rémy Martin. Audi is the official car of the Critics’ Circle Film Awards.

  • Tyler MacIntyre, Director Of PATCHWORK & TRAGEDY GIRLS: Interview

    Tyler MacIntyre, Director Of PATCHWORK & TRAGEDY GIRLS: Interview

    On the eve of Horror Channel’s UK TV premiere of PATCHWORK, director Tyler MacIntyre reflects on body image issues. twisting audience expections and his admiration for current female genre directors.

    Q: PATCHWORK finally gets its UK TV premiere on Horror Channel. Excited or what?

    Relieved actually. It’s been a long time coming. The third screening of the film ever happened at FrightFest in Glasgow and since then I’ve had people asking me when it was going to come out. The UK genre fans are among the most diehard in the world, so I’m very excited to finally have it available for them.

    Q: You were in attendance when PATCHWORK, your directorial feature debut, received its European premiere screening at FrightFest Glasgow 2016. What are your abiding memories?

    I met a lot of awesome filmmakers and made some really good friends on that trip, particularly Joe Begos, who had THE MIND’S EYE playing right before us. My favorite was doing one of my first Q&As with the great Alan Jones. He did an amazing job of contextualizing the film and set the expectations that allowed it to be one of the most fun screenings I’ve ever had.

    Q: It has been described as an “ingenious Frankenstein variant”. Fair comment? And how would you describe it? 

    Haha. Ingenious is a bit of a judgement call, but the inception of the character really did try to get behind what it would be like for a character comprised of multiple bodies. That’s what’s most off-putting about Frankenstein to me, so it was quite satisfying to explore that in the context of more contemporary body image issues.

    Q: Stuart Gordon helped you on the film? What role did he play?

    Stuart was as a bit of a mentor to us through the process. He read a very early draft of the script and gave us notes, as well as weighed in on the cuts. We were quite obviously influenced by the splat-stick horror of the late-1980s, DEAD ALIVE, EVIL DEAD II, and RE-ANIMATOR especially, so it was amazing to get his blessing.

    From l to r:  Tracey Fairaway, Tory Stolper & Maria Blasucci in PATCHWORK
     From l to r: Tracey Fairaway, Tory Stolper & Maria Blasucci in PATCHWORK

    Q: The chemistry between Tory Stolper, Tracey Fairaway and Maria Blasucci is amazing. How did that come together from the casting process?

    We had actually worked with Tory on the short film version, so she was the first in. I’d edited a film that Tracey acted in a few years before, so I knew she brought a lot of good ideas and had a fun bubbly energy. Once we had them in place, we had to counter-weight them with a more off-beat comedic energy, which Maria has very naturally. Once I got to see all three together it became apparent very quickly that they bounce off each other well, and it was going to be a blast to work on.

    Tyler MacIntyre on the set of PATCHWORK
    Tyler MacIntyre on the set of PATCHWORK

    Q: Your second feature, TRAGEDY GIRLS, described as “the most frightening slasher send-up since Scream”, also deals with strong women in subversive, anti-heroine roles. Is this a conscious theme to your work?

    When I write things either by myself or with my writing partner Chris Lee Hill, we tend to look for ways to twist the expectations of the audience, trying to take them somewhere they haven’t been before. That leads us to a lot of the more subversive elements. Since there are still a lot of story areas involving female protagonists that are unexplored, we often come up with ideas involving female leads pretty organically. We’ve also have been very fortunate to work with a lot of amazing up-and-coming actresses, who really inspire us to keep developing material with similar themes. 

    Tracey Fairaway in PATCHWORK
    Tracey Fairaway in PATCHWORK

    Q: TRAGEDY GIRLS closed FrightFest 2017, where you and the film received a rousing reception. What is it about the genre that attracts you the most?

    For me it’s actually the community. Fans of genre have a great way of standing up to be counted, and in my experience, they’re quite open and welcoming. The film industry is competitive and toxic enough as it is, so I’m happy to be part of a section that is actually really supportive and collaborative.

    Q: What’s your take on the burgeoning growth of female directors/voices in the horror genre?

    It’s amazing, and I hope grows even more quickly. I was absolutely bowled-over by what Julia Ducournau did with RAW. That movie floored me. So precise with its tone and psychology. And likewise with what Issa López did with TIGERS ARE NOT AFRAID. I watched the most emotional Q&A I’ve ever seen at the Canadian premiere of that film. We even named the teacher character in TRAGEDY GIRLS “Ms. Kent” after Jennifer Kent, because we were so impressed with THE BABADOOK. There are a lot of great voices popping up, which makes this a very exciting time.

    Q: Favourite genre film of 2019 so far?

    It’s probably PARASITE, but the year isn’t over yet.

    Q: Finally, what’s next?

    We are developing a couple of feature projects right now that are in the horror space, as well as a television series that’s more of a mystery-comedy. I am hoping that we get the opportunity to shoot our first studio feature film next year.

    PATCHWORK in on Horror Channel, Sat 14 Dec, 9pm.

  • Exit Poll Edition: Bits & Pieces

    Exit Poll Edition: Bits & Pieces

    Shore Scripts helps emerging screenwriters break into the industry. With our annual Feature and TV-Pilot contests, we discover new writers and get their scripts into the hands of our award-winning Judges and our unparalleled roster of 180+ Production Companies, Managers, and Agents. To further support our goal, we created our Short Film Fund. Working with the 70+ members on our Directors’ Roster, Shore Scripts now regularly produces at least one short film, proof-of-concept feature or pilot each year. Check our website for more info: https://www.shorescripts.com

    Shore Scripts

    Denise Richards features as “London’s Yoda” in a brand-new clip from January’s REALITY QUEEN! (In theaters, on demand and disc).

    The new UK trailer for Sid & Judy has landed; this fascinating and moving documentary from director Stephen Kijak (We Are X), on the passionate and turbulent relationship between Judy Garland and her manager and husband, Sid Luft. The film features the voices of Jon Hamm (Mad MenBaby Driver) and Jennifer Jason Leigh (The Hateful Eight,Annihilation) as Sid and Judy respectively. The film will be released on digital on 16 December.

    If ghosts can think and remember who they are, then the physical brain is not the only place where we store our inner selves. Helen is asked to train two young women into the art of communicating with the dead. But Helen’s days as a medium are long gone. In fact, she gave up that life 15 years ago when she lost her daughter. Today Helen is a different woman dedicated to her career in brain research. Things start to change when a visit from the other side offers her the design of a device that can do amazing things. But to everything there is a risk.

    Munro Films & Lightbulb Film Distribution are excited to announce that following its recent theatrical release, British sci-fi thriller, Invasion Planet Earth, will be coming to Digital Download from 16th December & DVD 30th December.

    Heidi and Jane are best friends living in a small town in the desert. When Jane, a Rodeo Queen contestant and military wife goes missing, Heidi, now alone in the world, must begin a search across the desert for her friend. She digs up secrets and encounters the violence of life on the road, crossing paths with a series of unusual men and women in her search for an honest connection in a dishonest world.

    Here’s a book called Oscarmetrics, which uses math to answer a variety of questions about the Oscars, such as whether the box office influences the results and which years saw the biggest upsets.

    Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter) stars as Tim Jenkin, a real-life ANC activist who was branded a terrorist – and imprisoned – in Africa’s maximum-security Pretoria prison in the late 1970’s during Apartheid. Along with two fellow freedom fighters, played by Daniel Webber (The Punisher, The Dirt) and Mark Leonard Winter (The Dressmaker) Tim made a complex and daring escape 18 months into his incarceration using handcrafted wooden keys. The ingenious escape attempt happened 40 years ago on 11th December 1979.