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  • Joss Whedon BAFTA Chat

    Joss Whedon BAFTA Chat

    BAFTA Guru caught up with Joss Whedon recently when he popped into our London HQ.
    Here are 5 things we learnt….

    Writing is his favourite thing ever…but he didn’t want to write for television.

    He believes only someone who is truly romantic can be disappointed enough to be a cynic.

    He was “raised by a pack of wild comedy writers” – his grandfather, father and both his brothers are television writers.

    He treats filming like the military… “You have to be in charge, know what you want and know you have the ability to get that”.

    Before getting his big break as a staff writer on Rosanne, Joss Whedon worked in the local video store.

    Watch the 3 short videos with Joss Whedon on BAFTA Guru below.

  • Enough Said Trailer

    Enough Said Trailer

    A divorced and single parent, Eva (Julia Louis Dreyfus) spends her days enjoying work as a masseuse but dreading her daughter’s impending departure for college. She meets Albert (James Gandolfini) – a sweet, funny and like-minded man also facing an empty nest.  As their romance quickly blossoms, Eva befriends Marianne (Catherine Keener), her new massage client.

    Marianne is a beautiful poet who seems “almost perfect” except for one prominent quality: she rags on her ex-husband way too much. Suddenly, Eva finds herself doubting her own relationship with Albert as she learns the truth about Marianne’s Ex.  Enough Said is a sharp, insightful comedy that humorously explores the mess that often comes with getting involved again.

    Enough Said will be released in cinemas across the UK & Ireland by Twentieth Century Fox on 18th October

  • Kill Your Darlings May Win At LFF

    Kill Your Darlings May Win At LFF

    Kill Your Darlings, the new film starring Daniel Radcliffe, is in contention to win the Sutherland Award at the 2013 BFI London Film Festival.

    The film will be in the First Feature Competition which recognizes the most original and imaginative directorial debut.

    Kill Your Darlings has been on the receiving end of critical acclaim at a number of other film festivals this year including Sundance and Venice, and has also been selected as a Gala Presentation at the upcoming Toronto International Film Festival. The film stars Daniel Radcliffe as Allen Ginsberg, leading an ensemble cast including Dane DeHaan as Lucien Carr; Ben Foster as William Burroughs; Jack Huston as Jack Kerouac; Michael C. Hall and Elizabeth Olsen. Directed by first time filmmaker John Krokidas, Kill Your Darlings is a coming-of-age tale based on actual events and the previously untold story of the men who went on to become the great poets of the beat generation.

    Set in the 1940’s during the early days of the literary revolution when these young men first meet at Columbia University, Kill Your Darlings is a story of friendship, obsession, jealousy and genius, their self-proclaimed brilliance suddenly stained by the brutal murder of David Kammerer which both consecrated and fractured their early fellowship.

  • JADOO BTS Clips

    JADOO BTS Clips

    JADOO is a British-made film set in Leicester, and tells the story of two brothers, Raja (Harish Patel – Run Fatboy Run) and Jagi (Kulvinder Ghir – Bend it Like Beckham). Both are wonderful chefs, who fall out so catastrophically that in the climax of their dispute they rip the family recipe book in half: one brother gets the starters and the other gets the main courses. They set up rival restaurants, on opposite sides of the Belgrave Road in Leicester; one cooking starters and the other main courses, and refuse to talk to one another.

    Meet the Jadoo team

    A delicious foodie-comedy, JADOO’s secret ingredient is a delightful romantic twist, which sees Raja’s daughter Shalini (Amara Karan – The Darjeeling Limited), attempt to get the brothers talking again. She hatches a plan and asks them to work together to cook her a perfect Indian wedding banquet…but will she succeed?

    For the love of food

    The film also stars Indian chef and actress Madhur Jaffrey, Tom Mison (One Day), Ray Panthaki (Eastenders), Paul Bazely (Benidorm), Adeel Akhtar (Four Lions), and the late Sophiya Haque (Coronation Street) and Paul Bhattacharjee (Casino Royale). JADOO, which means ‘Magic’ in Hindi, is written and directed by Amit Gupta whose debut film Resistance garnered him a Best First Film Award nomination by the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain Awards, and is produced by Richard Holmes (Eden Lake), Isabelle Georgeaux (Resistance), Amanda Faber (Resistance) and Nikki Parrott (The Market: a Tale of Trade).

    The Jadoo team re-create ‘Holi’, the festival of colours

    The film received its World Premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival, and will also feature in this year’s Culinary Zinema: Film and Gastronomy section at this year’s San Sebastian Film Festival.

    Jadoo’s production designer talks about the look and feel of the film

  • Lil Bub & Friendz Review

    Lil Bub & Friendz Review

    By Gordon Foote.

    I remember a simpler time, when the internet was the refuge of nerds, and we (for I count myself amongst their number) used this marvel of human ingenuity mostly for illegally downloading music, looking at naked ladies, and playing text based adventure games.  These days however, for better or worse, the net has refashioned itself into a digital homage to Ancient Egypt, where everyone is writing on walls and worshipping cats.

    In the last few years, the likes of Keyboard Cat and Grumpy Cat (soon to star in her own movie) have become, not only, internet sensations and household names but, perhaps more interestingly, booming businesses.  The whys and wherefores of this social trend are investigated in Lil Bub and Friendz, released this week online.

    In all writing, the bias of the author (or in this case reviewer) is often worth knowing before reading, so in the interests of full-disclosure, let me prefix by saying, “I am not a cat person”.  Maybe it’s the aloof nature? Maybe it’s fact that their little balls of fluff, pointy bits, and malice? Maybe I’m jealous of their ability to breeze through life doing the bare minimum?  I’m not sure, but whatever the reason, they’re not for me.  As such, when this hour-long documentary landed in my inbox, it was met with an audible groan and some foot stamping.  Fortunately for me, however, Lil Bub and Friendz isn’t half bad!

    Filmmakers, Andy Capper and Juliette Eisner, tackle two topics during the feature (being broken down into four manageable portions on Youtube for the ADHD sufferers amongst you); the first of these foci is the life and times of Lil Bub; a cat with a shopping list of genetic mutations to her name, who has achieved internet stardom and over 187,000 likes on Facebook despite being a dwarf with poorly functioning limbs and being polydactyl (no…you’re thinking of pterodactyl, very different thing).   These sections are heart warming as we learn of Bub’s ever-present health concerns from the family who found her and the man who would later adopted her, Mike Bridavsky and get a whirlwind glimpse into the life online casino of an internet celebrity.   The documentary does a wonderful job of highlighting the bond between Bridavsky and Bub, as well as several other meme sensations and their owners. Eccentricities are very much on show throughout the feature as cats are kissed, praised, and mollycoddled, and a beard is licked for a disturbing length of time…

    Depending on how you feel about cats and cat people this may come down on the weird/creepy side of the fence for you, but Capper and Eisner portray it with parity and manage to avoid adoration or open mockery.

    Lil Bub’s story is liberally sprinkled with cursory glances at how cats came to rule the cyber world.  This includes looks at why people feel the need to communicate via their feline friends and the kind of life-styles those whose pets have been chosen for internet stardom have been catapulted towards.    These parts of the film were well spaced and succeed in breaking up Bridavsky and Bub’s journey enough to prevent it from getting stale, even for a cat-sceptic like me.

    Sadly, the sections less directly focused on Lil Bub seem content to skim over the surface of the psychology and history behind the craze and could easily have been expanded to dig deeper into the human side of the cat/fan dynamic.  It is debateable whether this was done for filming reasons (to keeps the pace high and the topics fresh) or whether, upon closer inspection, Capper and Eisner found there was scant little holding up the current phenomenon.

    Films like this will always divide audiences.  Those of you who are onboard with Team Lolcat are probably already watching the documentary on Youtube and will continue to do so regardless of the score I  put on this charming wee film, and those of you who don’t know your Nyan Cat from your Maru are probably going to give this one a miss.  Realistically, it’s not a bad standpoint for either group.   For all the documentary’s warmth and insight, there is little here which will inspire converts to the feline cause.

    For the few of you who are fence-sitting, it is worth taking into account that Lil Bub and Friendz took the prize for best Feature Film at the Tribeca Online Film Festival in April this year (at which Lil Bub got to meet Robert De Niro! My jealously of cats grows…) which should allay any fears of this being an amateur effort or an exercise in fan-service.

    To my surprise, I enjoyed Lil Bub and Friendz: it hasn’t made me a cat person, and the ‘z’ in the title angers me every time I have to write it, but the narrative is cohesive, the structure keeps the film flowing, and the occasional toe-dipping into the wider issues surrounding a meme-centric society helps stop the cuteness from getting suffocating.

    3/5

    GF