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  • The 69 Best British Drama Films

    The 69 Best British Drama Films

    Britflicks have compiled a list of the top 69 Best British drama films as the second part in a series of articles highlighting the Best British films the UK has to offer.

    Out of the 69 British drama films the top director with four entries is David Lean and if we had been able to include Dr Zhivago as a British film production he would have had five entries. Runners-up with 3 entries a piece are Ken Loach and the legendry Stanley Kubrick, followed by Steve McQueen, Shane Meadows, Neil Jordan, Mike Leigh, Michael Powell, Lynne Ramsay, Danny Boyle, Carol Reed, Anthony Minghella, John Boorman and Andrea Arnold all with two entries respectively.

    All 69 British drama films add up to a total of 8148 minutes or 5 days, 15 Hours and 47 minutes of footage, giving an average film length of 118 minutes. The longest being Lawrence of Arabia at a whopping 216 minutes, leaving David Lean’s 86 minute romance a real ‘Brief Encounter’.

    The 69 Best British drama films are as follows;

    1. A Clockwork Orange
    2. Lawrence of Arabia
    3. Gandhi
    4. The Railway Children
    5. Trainspotting
    6. The End Of The Affair
    7. Walkabout
    8. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
    9. The Killing Fields
    10. The Third Man
    11. The Long Good Friday
    12. The Bridge on the River Kwai
    13. Cold Mountain
    14. Children Of Men
    15. Midnight Express
    16. Brief Encounter
    17. Atonement
    18. The Pianist
    19. A Man For All Seasons
    20. Eyes Wide Shut
    21. Barry Lyndon
    22. Oliver!
    23. The English Patient
    24. Quadrophenia
    25. Notes On A Scandal
    26. Goodbye, Mr Chips
    27. Shooting Dogs
    28. The Kings Speech
    29. A Matter of Life and Death
    30. Cashback
    31. If…..
    32. Billy Elliot
    33. Dead Man’s Shoes
    34. We Need To Talk About Kevin
    35. Women In Love
    36. The Constant Gardener
    37. Women In Love
    38. Kes
    39. Brazil
    40. Black Narcisuss
    41. Watership Down
    42. Chariots Of Fire
    43. Control
    44. An Education
    45. Naked
    46. The Last King Of Scotland
    47. Whistle Down The Wind
    48. Shame
    49. In America
    50. Pure
    51. Secrets and Lies
    52. Scum
    53. The Crying Game
    54. A Field In England
    55. Nowhere Boy
    56. The Magdalene Sisters
    57. My Name Is Joe
    58. Hunger
    59. Shallow Grave
    60. This Is England
    61. Nil By Mouth
    62. Hope and Glory
    63. Excalibur
    64. Fish Tank
    65. Tyrannosaur
    66. Ratcatcher
    67. Sweet Sixteen
    68. The Flying Scotsman
    69. Red Road

  • Star Trek: The World’s First Truly Intergalactic Blu-ray!

    Star Trek: The World’s First Truly Intergalactic Blu-ray!

    In case you missed this…

    An industry first for Paramount with their sci-fi spectacular Star Trek Into Darkness, as they release a one-of-a-kind Blu-ray with special meteorite packaging straight from space.

    Meteorite Cover Inner

    Paramount are creating the ultimate opportunity for one very lucky Star Trek fan and space enthusiast; a one-off Blu-ray off Star Trek Into Darkness with Special Edition Packaging featuring an authentic 497-year-old meteorite. The space rock from the Nantan meteorite shower, which was witnessed falling in Guangxi-Zhuang province in China 1516 A.D., has been hand carved into the shape of the internationally recognisable Star Fleet symbol and will feature prominently on the exceptionally exclusive Blu-ray Special Packaging which includes the meteorite’s certificate of authenticity.

    Meteorite Cover Outer

    What a cool idea.

  • Way Of The Monkey’s Claw Trailer

    Way Of The Monkey’s Claw Trailer

    From Marc Price, director of Colin comes this treat of a follow up.

    Way of the Monkey’s Claw – Trailer from Nowhere Fast Productions on Vimeo.

    A gang of malevolent ninjas who lay siege to a South London pub in search of a mysterious scroll. Struck with a slow-acting and lethal poison, the survivors must work together to save themselves before it’s too late.

    Celebrating its low budget roots, the film is made in the spirit of John Carpenter and Roger Corman.

  • Dead Man Down

    Dead Man Down

    Prepare yourself for an adrenalin-fuelled rollercoaster ride with Dead Man Down, an action-packed revenge thriller from Niels Areden Oplev, the award-winning Danish director of the original The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo in his American film debut. Set in the criminal underworld of New York City, and starring Colin Farrell, Noomi Rapace, Dominic Cooper, Academy Award® nominee Terrence Howard, and WWE star Wade Barrett, Dead Man Down is released on Blu-ray and DVD on 23 September 2013.

    The Blu-ray and DVD come complete with special features taking you further inside the action, including featurettes about the cinematography and how the firefights were staged.

    Victor (Farrell; Total Recall, Seven Psychopaths), a rising gangland player, has infiltrated the crime empire run by Alphonse (Howard; Iron Man, Hustle & Flow), with the single purpose of making him pay for destroying his once happy life. In the midst of this, Victor meets Beatrice (Rapace; The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Prometheus), a mysterious French woman, who lives with her mother, Valentine (Isabelle Huppert; Amour, I Heart Huckabees), in the high rise apartment building opposite Victor’s. As Victor becomes attracted to her, he soon finds out that Beatrice is not the woman she seems be, but rather a crime victim seeking retribution for which she needs Victor’s help. When these two wounded people get together, each obsessed with retribution, their chemistry and intense relationship leads them to execute a violent and cathartic plan for revenge.

    Smart and absorbing with constant twists and turns, and packed with explosions, car chases and shoot-outs, Dead Man Down will have you on the edge of your seat from start to finish.

  • Berlin 36′ – Review

    Berlin 36′ – Review

    High-jumps and Hi-jinks at the 1936 Olympic games.

    In 1936 Gretel Bergmann was Germany’s most successful female high-jumper, frustratingly for the Nazi’s she was also Jewish. Understandably Bergmann did not feel like representing her country. What with it’s penchant of hatred toward her own people. Understandably the Nazi’s didn’t really want her to appear at the Olympics. What with it’s penchant for hatred toward her people. So began an odd tug of war where Bergmann at first refuses to compete, then is blackmailed into, then decides to do her best to win all the while the Nazis don’t really want her too, but threaten her family, but still don’t really want too. It was a quagmire of PR for all involved.

    So after a brief introduction where we meet Gretel (Karoline Herfurth) and her family it’s off to the training camp/boarding school. There Gretel meets the other bitches… I mean athletes competing for a chance to go to the Olympics. The majority of them don’t like her either because she’s Jewish or just more famous than they are. She is given tough but secretly fair coaching by her… coach. Plus she makes friends with her roommate Marie (Sebastian Urzendowsky). For the first half of he film plays out like a standard period, TV drama. It moves along at a steady pace with every bit of melodrama sucked from each scene by the cast who range from disinterested to overblown. Karoline Herfurth is watchable through out though.

    Joking aside, the story of a top Jewish athlete in a Nazi-operated Olympics is a story worth telling and has potential to be a compelling drama. Let’s face it though high-jumping in the 1930’s doesn’t sound like a sure fire subject to interest the masses and sadly Berlin 36 proves this to be the case. I’m not suggesting that Director Kaspar Heidelbach presents the story in some sort of Michael-Bay fetishistic visual style but dear God man have someone fall over or something, We see many shots of woman jump over a bar with ease, with supposed tension coming from close ups of the bar being raised, before the woman bound it with ease again. It just all feels pretty flat.

    *Spoiler territory*

    The film also features the least surprising moment of gender confusion since Diana Rigg ripped her beard off in Theatre of Blood. A moment of huge revelation comes in the shower when Kretel discovers Marie in fact has a penis of some undetermined size. Gretel seems surprised by this despite Marie clearly having the toned torso of a twenty-something man. The film asks the audience to be surprised by this despite Marie clearly having the toned torso of a twenty-something man and being played by a man called Sebastian. It’s a moment that could have led the film down a psychological darker path and perhaps made the film interesting. But no, a few quick heart to hearts, the matter is dealt with.

    The film eventually gets so bored with itself it decides to turn into a documentary. As Marie runs for her climatic jump over the bar at the Olympics the picture freezes to reveal the real Gretel Bergmann, alive and well in New York. Providing us with the films coda she tells us what happened to her and that she never spoke to Marie (in actuality called Heinrich Ratjen) again. A quick google of his name will show you that his was probably the more interesting story of the two.

    Berlin 36. A film made with good intentions but also with the belief that everyone watching it will have a heart attack if it dares to turn up the tension just a little bit.