Curzon distributed theatrically in UK in June.
Myriad Pictures has launched talks with Tiff buyers to migrant crisis drama The Flood starring Games Of Thrones leads Lena Headey and Iain Glen.
Kirk D’Amico and his team have acquired all rights excluding the UK to the political drama that includes Ivanno Jeremiah from Humans and the upcoming Game Of Thrones prequel.
Anthony Woodley directed from a screenplay by Helen Kingston about a tough immigration officer (Headey) assigned to assess a young man (Jeremiah) seeking entry to the UK who may harbor sinister intentions.
Luke Healy produced The Flood, which premiered...
Myriad Pictures has launched talks with Tiff buyers to migrant crisis drama The Flood starring Games Of Thrones leads Lena Headey and Iain Glen.
Kirk D’Amico and his team have acquired all rights excluding the UK to the political drama that includes Ivanno Jeremiah from Humans and the upcoming Game Of Thrones prequel.
Anthony Woodley directed from a screenplay by Helen Kingston about a tough immigration officer (Headey) assigned to assess a young man (Jeremiah) seeking entry to the UK who may harbor sinister intentions.
Luke Healy produced The Flood, which premiered...
- 9/9/2019
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
Curzon distributed theatrically in UK in June.
Myriad Pictures has launched talks with Tiff buyers to migrant crisis drama The Flood starring Games Of Thrones leads Lena Headey and Iain Glen.
Kirk D’Amico and his team have acquired all rights excluding the UK to the political drama that includes Ivanno Jeremiah from Humans and the upcoming Game Of Thrones prequel.
Anthony Woodley directed from a screenplay by Helen Kingston about a tough immigration officer (Headey) assigned to assess a young man (Jeremiah) seeking entry to the UK who may harbor sinister intentions.
Luke Healy produced The Flood, which premiered...
Myriad Pictures has launched talks with Tiff buyers to migrant crisis drama The Flood starring Games Of Thrones leads Lena Headey and Iain Glen.
Kirk D’Amico and his team have acquired all rights excluding the UK to the political drama that includes Ivanno Jeremiah from Humans and the upcoming Game Of Thrones prequel.
Anthony Woodley directed from a screenplay by Helen Kingston about a tough immigration officer (Headey) assigned to assess a young man (Jeremiah) seeking entry to the UK who may harbor sinister intentions.
Luke Healy produced The Flood, which premiered...
- 9/9/2019
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
Unmissable and compelling this brave Maori sisterhood movie is a precious occasion to feel the force coming from a community that is often neglected, and not just in terms of cinematic visibility.
The film was released last summer in New Zealand with the aid of the New Zealand Film Commission and was picked up straight away by the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival. It has consequently generated a buzz and is making its way within the festival circuit.
“Waru” is screening at Aperture: Asia & Pacific Film Festival
Some explanations are needed. “Waru” is the collective effort of 8 (actually 9 as one is a joined work) woman Maori filmmakers who were asked by producers Kerry Warkia and Kiel McNaughton to follow a set of strict rules; their 8 short films had to be shot in one single take of exactly 10 minutes, in real time, all set at 10am of the day of a...
The film was released last summer in New Zealand with the aid of the New Zealand Film Commission and was picked up straight away by the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival. It has consequently generated a buzz and is making its way within the festival circuit.
“Waru” is screening at Aperture: Asia & Pacific Film Festival
Some explanations are needed. “Waru” is the collective effort of 8 (actually 9 as one is a joined work) woman Maori filmmakers who were asked by producers Kerry Warkia and Kiel McNaughton to follow a set of strict rules; their 8 short films had to be shot in one single take of exactly 10 minutes, in real time, all set at 10am of the day of a...
- 6/26/2018
- by Adriana Rosati
- AsianMoviePulse
With studio space at a premium in the U.K., a major new development is being planned for Liverpool in northern England. Twickenham Studios and property developer Capital&Centric unveiled plans Thursday for the £50 million ($67 million) project, which has been dubbed Littlewoods Studios.
Using the art deco buildings once occupied by defunct British department store and football gambling company Littlewoods, plus surrounding land, the development will feature two 20,000-square-foot sound stages as well as workshops, prop storage, and office space.
The developers own the Littlewoods buildings and need planning permission for the project. The plan is for Twickenam Studios, the base for “Blade Runner” and countless other big features, to become the first anchor tenant, providing it with a base in the north of England to complement its existing base in southwest London.
“Liverpool’s architecture, accessibility and can-do attitude sees filmmakers return to the city time and time again,...
Using the art deco buildings once occupied by defunct British department store and football gambling company Littlewoods, plus surrounding land, the development will feature two 20,000-square-foot sound stages as well as workshops, prop storage, and office space.
The developers own the Littlewoods buildings and need planning permission for the project. The plan is for Twickenam Studios, the base for “Blade Runner” and countless other big features, to become the first anchor tenant, providing it with a base in the north of England to complement its existing base in southwest London.
“Liverpool’s architecture, accessibility and can-do attitude sees filmmakers return to the city time and time again,...
- 6/7/2018
- by Stewart Clarke
- Variety Film + TV
London’s Twickenham Studios is teaming up with property developer Capital & Centric to launch Littlewood Studios, a new film and TV hub in the northern UK city of Liverpool.
Regeneration specialist Capital & Centric bought the iconic art-deco Littlewoods building in 2017 and now London studio Twickenham, which has hosted movies including Blade Runner, The Italian Job, Gandhi and more recently The Martian and Baby Driver as well as TV series such as Black Mirror and McMafia, has agreed to a deal to become the hub’s first anchor tenant by taking over 85,000 square feet of the 300,000 square foot building.
As part of a long-gestating concept, the building is to get a $67M (£50M) refurb including two new 20,000 square foot sound stages, workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices, ahead of a potential 2020 opening.
The building is the former HQ of one-time UK retail and soccer betting giant Littlewoods. Founded in 1923 and going strong until the 1980s,...
Regeneration specialist Capital & Centric bought the iconic art-deco Littlewoods building in 2017 and now London studio Twickenham, which has hosted movies including Blade Runner, The Italian Job, Gandhi and more recently The Martian and Baby Driver as well as TV series such as Black Mirror and McMafia, has agreed to a deal to become the hub’s first anchor tenant by taking over 85,000 square feet of the 300,000 square foot building.
As part of a long-gestating concept, the building is to get a $67M (£50M) refurb including two new 20,000 square foot sound stages, workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices, ahead of a potential 2020 opening.
The building is the former HQ of one-time UK retail and soccer betting giant Littlewoods. Founded in 1923 and going strong until the 1980s,...
- 6/7/2018
- by Andreas Wiseman
- Deadline Film + TV
Studio to be built on 85,000sq ft Littlewoods site.
London-based production house Twickenham Studios has agreed a major new deal for a £50m facility in Liverpool.
Property developer Capital&Centric, which owns the Littlewoods building in the east of the city where the facility will be housed, has struck an agreement with Twickenham to set up a studio on the 85,000sq ft site.
The site, named Littlewoods Studios, will feature two new 20,000sq ft sound stages alongside supporting workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices.
Funding for the studio is being raised by Capital&Centric. An undisclosed amount of private equity is already in place,...
London-based production house Twickenham Studios has agreed a major new deal for a £50m facility in Liverpool.
Property developer Capital&Centric, which owns the Littlewoods building in the east of the city where the facility will be housed, has struck an agreement with Twickenham to set up a studio on the 85,000sq ft site.
The site, named Littlewoods Studios, will feature two new 20,000sq ft sound stages alongside supporting workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices.
Funding for the studio is being raised by Capital&Centric. An undisclosed amount of private equity is already in place,...
- 6/7/2018
- by Tom Grater
- ScreenDaily
Studio to be built on 85,000sq ft Littlewoods site.
London-based production house Twickenham Studios has agreed a major new deal to build a £50m facility in Liverpool.
Property developer Capital&Centric, which owns the Littlewoods building in the east of the city where the facility will be housed, has struck an agreement with Twickenham to build on the 85,000sq ft site.
The studio, named Littlewoods Studios, will feature two new 20,000sq ft sound stages alongside supporting workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices.
Funding for the studio is being raised by Capital&Centric. An undisclosed amount of private equity is already in place,...
London-based production house Twickenham Studios has agreed a major new deal to build a £50m facility in Liverpool.
Property developer Capital&Centric, which owns the Littlewoods building in the east of the city where the facility will be housed, has struck an agreement with Twickenham to build on the 85,000sq ft site.
The studio, named Littlewoods Studios, will feature two new 20,000sq ft sound stages alongside supporting workshops, wardrobe and prop storage, and offices.
Funding for the studio is being raised by Capital&Centric. An undisclosed amount of private equity is already in place,...
- 6/7/2018
- by Tom Grater
- ScreenDaily
Halfway through The Patriarch (Mahana), young Simeon (Akuhata Keef) is enjoying a trip to the cinema that he’s fought hard for. His grandfather, Tamihana (Temuera Morrison), who rules undisputed over his extended Maori family, sees him as insubordinate and certainly would prefer the kids don’t “waste money on make-believe.” But Simeon loves westerns, and a town screening of 3:10 to Yuma is too good to pass up. Yet even Glenn Ford and Van Eflin’s march towards that train platform is derailed by intrusions from the real world, with a member of a rival family riding a horse into the cinema and an unexpected kiss opening up new perspectives in the ensuing confusion.
It’s a brief moment of autobiographical fun for director Lee Tamahori, who sprinkles bits of his own New Zealand upbringing on top of this adaptation of Witi Ihimaera’s novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies.
It’s a brief moment of autobiographical fun for director Lee Tamahori, who sprinkles bits of his own New Zealand upbringing on top of this adaptation of Witi Ihimaera’s novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies.
- 2/15/2016
- by Tommaso Tocci
- The Film Stage
Every once in a while, a film comes along that proves you don’t need a big budget to get a good result. Gareth Edwards did it to spectacular effect with Monsters, launching a career that has seen Edwards return this year with his epic blockbuster follow-up, Godzilla.
The sci-fi genre is one of the hardest to pull off on a low budget, largely because of the visual effects concerns. In spite of the obstacles facing him, however, New Zealand director Ferand Peek had an idea and saw it through to completion, resulting in the sci-fi short, Mis-drop.
300 years in the future, a forensic accountant reviews the video stream from one mercenary’s drop-pod which has been damaged during the initial stages of a colonial invasion.
Elliot Travers stars as the soldier in the lead, joined by Maria Walker, Larry Rew, and Joseph Sherman-Mendez.
Peek is firing on all cylinders here,...
The sci-fi genre is one of the hardest to pull off on a low budget, largely because of the visual effects concerns. In spite of the obstacles facing him, however, New Zealand director Ferand Peek had an idea and saw it through to completion, resulting in the sci-fi short, Mis-drop.
300 years in the future, a forensic accountant reviews the video stream from one mercenary’s drop-pod which has been damaged during the initial stages of a colonial invasion.
Elliot Travers stars as the soldier in the lead, joined by Maria Walker, Larry Rew, and Joseph Sherman-Mendez.
Peek is firing on all cylinders here,...
- 6/2/2014
- by Kenji Lloyd
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
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