Thursday, July 28, 2011

Voddler launches iPad-app – watch blockbusters on your tablet!




Voddler launches iPad-app – watch blockbusters on your tablet!
 
Video-on-demand service Voddler just released a native iPad-app, so that film viewers can watch films for free from the Voddler catalog on their iPad. Voddler already has an iPhone-app out. The new app makes full use of the iPad’s larger screen, both for navigation and film viewing.
Voddler already has both iPhone- and Android-apps out. For its brand new iPad-app, Voddler has adapted the user interface to take full advantage of the larger screen. The films have also been optimized for viewing on the larger surface.

We continue to develop so that you can see movies whenever and wherever you want, regardless of which screen you happen to have nearby. At the same time, we keep our focus on seamless transitions between the screens. If you, for instance, start watching a film on your mobile on the way home, you can then pick up exactly where you left off when you get to your computer-connected TV at home, or on your iPad-table if the home-TV was already occupied, says Anders Sjöman, head of communication at Voddler.



Voddler already has both iPhone- and Android-apps out. For its brand new iPad-app, Voddler has adapted the user interface to take full advantage of the larger screen. The films have also been optimized for viewing on the larger surface.
You find the Voddler iPad-app by searching for “Voddler” in your Ipad eller in iTunes on your computer. The app does not require any subscription, and movies are shown over both mobile networks and WiFi.


To cover the additional costs of film storage and streaming that the iPad entails, given its larger screen size and resolution compared to the iPhone, the iPad-app has a one-time purchase fee. At launch, the pay app costs 49 SEK (Sweden), 5.49 EUR (Finland), 42 DKK (Denmark) and 49 NOK (Norway).
Voddler’s previous iPhone-app remains free to download.
The available titles in the iPad-app come from Voddler’s growing catalog of over 4 500 titles. At launch, 200 titles are available, and Voddler will be activating more and more for iPad-viewing on a regular basis.

Natural Pursuits – The Screen Dramas of Simon Gray Television Season at BFI Southbank in August 2011


BFI Southbank celebrates the tragi-comic screen dramas of the late Simon Gray. A writer of immense wit and intellectual charm whose razor-sharp dialogue is unsurpassed. The month long season features some of Gray’s most celebrated work including screenings of Unnatural Pursuits (1992), After Pilkington (1987) and They Never Slept (1991) which feature performances by British acting elite including Alan Bates, Edward Fox and Miranda Richardson.
 
Following the screening of They Never Slept, a panel of guests including producer Kenith Trodd, and directors Udayan Prasad and Christopher Morahan will discuss his great contribution to television drama and the theatre illustrated with clips of some of his early and rare television plays to be chaired by Broadcaster Matthew Sweet. After the screening of Butley on Sunday 14 Aug, Lindsay Posner, director of the 40th anniversary revival of the play currently running at the Duchess Theatre will also be welcomed to the BFI stage for a Q&A.
 
Gray wrote prolifically from the mid-60s onwards for both the West End stage (Otherwise Engaged, Quartermaine’s Terms, The Late Middle Classes, Butley) and for television, where such important early successes such as Death of a Teddy BearMan in a Sidecar andThe Caramel Crisis were carelessly wiped. His most fertile period writing specifically for TV occurred between 1975 and 1993 during a close collaboration with producer Kenith Trodd and four  major directors, Michael Lindsay- Hogg, Christopher Morahan, Udayan Prasad and Pat O’Connor. They encouraged Simon to move away from a theatrical style into a more filmic idiom and to capture more intensely the ironic and often cruel tone demanded by his work – light witty comedy but with a very dark undertone. Perhaps this was one quality that attracted Harold Pinter to direct much of his friend Gray’s stage work (and the movie of Butley), because it is so different from his own in its outpouring of dialogue, and yet at the same time so carefully formed and controlled.
 
Often concerned with the writer’s plight, as in the International Emmy-winning Unnatural Pursuits (1992), his screenplays were deeply unfashionable in their lack of any overt political content. Ironically, it is precisely this lack of political edge that gives the works their abiding relevance. By using the universal language of humour they speak to us all. Gray once told Trodd that to succeed in the West End he had only to charm an audience for a couple of hours with a single idea, but for the 90 minutes of a film or TV drama, ‘the turns, jokes and surprises had to keep coming all the way through’. As this season demonstrates, on this credo he more than delivers.

The BFI Southbank is open to all. BFI members are entitled to a discount on all tickets.  BFI Southbank Box Office tel: 020 7928 3232. Unless otherwise stated tickets are £9.50, concs £6.75 Members pay £1.50 less on any ticket. Website www.bfi.org.uk/southbank

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Castle Defense for iPad 2 introduces Eyetracking technology

TopWare and in-house developer Reality Pump have truly stepped up to the next level in fun for the iPad 2. This unique version of Two Worlds II: Castle Defense institutes 3D-ET™ technology in gaming for the first time ever. Making huge modifications to the strategy game’s engine for the mobile iOS platform, the Eyetracking system allows the player to “look around corners” in a strict sense of words.  All without the annoyance of any extra needed equipment like special glasses. The camera inside the iPad 2 recognizes the position of the viewer and changes the perspective of the game regarding the player’s point of view.

To allow everyone to experience this impressive new technology, 3D-ET™ is free even on the Lite version of Castle Defense, which can be upgraded with single level purchases. Of course, the offer is also available to owners of the full version.

TopWare Interactive CEO, Dirk P. Hassinger explains, “by introducing the new Eyetracking technology we are ahead of the competition once more and will expand this edge in the future. Right now we are adapting the system for more platforms like PC or Mac and will also present some challenging 3D surprises within the next couple of months.”
                                                                                                      

vzaar picks a winner from over 1,000 online business videos

vzaar, (http://www.vzaar.com/) a leading video hosting platform for business, today announced that the hotly contested vzaar 2011 online video competition has been won by Karl Taylor Photography (http://karltaylorphotography.com), with what vzaar CEO Stephen McCluskey describes as a film with “memorable, exquisite photography.”

Karl Taylor has been a professional photographer for over 15 years and has traveled the globe on assignments for some of the world’s most successful companies. His artistic film – one of many that are used on his company website to promote his business – won the title of Best Overall Video 2011 in the vzaar Video Festival, supported by Hollywood film director, Oliver Stone, who is a key shareholder in vzaar.

The winning videos can be viewed here (http://vzaar.com/about/award_winners_2011) on the vzaar website, along with the other winning entries which came out tops in three categories:
  • The Best Product Video was won by the production company Hilltribe, www.hilltribetv.com, for a clearly interpreted, engaging and enticing cookery shoot for their client Muddy Boots burgers.

  • The Top Award for the Creative Use of Video was scooped up by Jimdo, www.jimdo.com, an innovative ecommerce and website building company, who cleverly used video to show effective collaboration and project workflow.

  • Best Video by a Creative Agency went to Outside Line, www.outsideline.co.uk , a full service digital agency, for their “superb, imaginative commercial” for Becks Beer.
Speaking on behalf of the judges, Mr McCluskey said the overall standard of entries was “incredibly high”, and it is very encouraging to discover that vzaar’s clients are producing work of such excellent quality to promote their businesses online.

According to Mr. McCluskey, “The winning entry stood out from the rest, however, because it featured a variety of compelling elements. The imagery was inspiring, the content was haunting, the soundtrack well edited and highly compatible.”

Each of the winners will be presented with a vzaar video festival award and a logo to feature on their websites.
vzaar hopes to make the highly successful contest an annual event aimed at spotlighting both cinematic creativity and production quality for online business videos.

EROTIBOT, a film by Naoyuki TOMOMATSU

Released in the UK on DVD on 26 September 2011

EROTIBOT_Packshot_72dpi.jpg 



SYNOPSIS:

Can love prevail over sex, money, androids, and ninjas?

Erotibot is the latest film from the production company behind the powerful earth, shattering Big Tits Zombie & ultra bloody gorefest The Horny House of Horror.

Tamayo (Mahiro Aine) is so adorable! From the time she was small she has been treated as the ultimate princess!  Tomayo, is heiress to her wealthy family’s fortunes.  In order to protect her from outside danger she is looked after by three android bodyguards. The first android is masterful and good looking. The second has beastlike strength, and the third is a clumsy misfit who can't seem to get anything right.  He fantasises over his mistress and is adored by her.  Together, the three androids help detect danger, and serve Tomayo during the day, and occasionally engage in after-dark 'bedroom protection' as well... Life is good! 

Meanwhile another family member, Tsukiyo (Japanese AV star Maria Ozawa) who is jealous of Tomayo, hires a private detective to spy on her.  He uncovers a dark secret that Tomayo is in fact the “bastard daughter” of a servant. When Tsukiyo discovers this, she is consumed by rage  believing Tomayo to be an embarrassment to the family and not ‘pure blood’. Along with her servant Azami (Asami, The Machine GirlRobogeisha), she plots to regain the inheritance she believes to be hers!!! Can she distract the three Androids long enough to exact her plan?! Who will the Androids serve in the end?! Which Android will win Tamayo's love??!!

Love, tears, and laughs tell a fascinating story that will leave viewers satisfied with their choice in erotic Sci-fi Fantasy, and will answer that age old question "Do heiresses dream of erotic androids or cup noodles?” Erotibot is released on DVD in the UK by Bounty Films on 26 September 2011.



SPECIAL FEATURES:

- Trailer
- New exclusive interviews with AV stars Maria Ozawa and Asami



DETAILS:

Label: BOUNTY FILMS

DVD Catalogue No: BF88008
DVD Barcode: 5060225880080
DVD RRP: £16.34
Release Date: 26 September 2011
Certificate: 18
Run Time: 71 min. approx.
Format:  1.78:1 OAR/ Colour
Genre: Sci-Fi/ Erotica
Director: Naoyuki TOMOMATSU
Year: 2011
Country:  Japan
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English (Optional)

GOSSIP GIRL: THE COMPLETE FOURTH SEASON

High Society and Low Blows Hit the Streets on DVD on 15 August 2011 

Here’s the dish, GG fans: Warner Home Video is bringing all 22 juicy episodes of Gossip Girl: The Complete Fourth Season to DVD on 15th August to keep fans clued-in to the buzz, secrets and scandals of Manhattan’s elite.

Developed for television by Josh Schwartz (The O.C., Chuck) and Stephanie Savage (The O.C.), Gossip Girl: The Complete Fourth Season  stars many of young Hollywood’s hottest talent: Blake Lively, Leighton Meester, Penn Badgley, Chace Crawford, Taylor Momsen, Ed Westwick, and Jessica Szohr, with Kelly Rutherford and Matthew Settle.

Between Blair (Meester) and Serena’s (Lively) thrilling summer in Paris, Chuck’s (Westwick) new girlfriend and new identity, unexpected fatherhood for Dan (Badgely), a power play for Bass Industries, Blair’s too-haute-to-handle internship at Wmagazine and a vicious conspiracy that threatens to bring down one of your favorite Upper East Siders, season four sizzles with some very surprising hookups and meltdowns. With lies and betrayals at every turn, Serena, Blair, Nate (Crawford), Chuck, Dan struggle to keep their friends close and their frenemies closer…!

The five-disc set includes all 22 one-hour episodes from the fourth season, and nearly an hour of never-before-seen special features including two all-new featurettes, unaired scenes, and a gag reel.

Don’t miss out on all the goss with Gossip Girl: The Complete Fourth Season on DVD from 15th August and available to download on iTunes now.

DVD SPECIAL FEATURES

Bisoux a Paris!: Go Abroad on a Spree in Paris with the Cast and Creative Team

Exposing Gossip Girl: The Making of Episode 18, The Kids Stay in the Picture

Gag Reel

Unaired Scenes

DEVIL BAT DIARY - The Journal of Johnny Layton

by Peter H. Brothers
 
Inspired by the famous 1940 film, “Devil Bat Diary” (ISBN: 9-781461-070924), tells the “true” story of what “really” happened to the unhappy citizens of Heathville, Illinois, during that terrible prewar summer, as recorded in the long-suppressed journals of Chicago City Register’s principal newspaper correspondent, Jonathan “Johnny” Layton.
 
The Devil Bats were furry fiends created by a scientific genius who believes himself wrongfully relegated to concocting perfumes and colognes which he despises for wages not worth mentioning.  So, as a means to an embittered end, he manufactures an evil ointment with a scent that so infuriates his giant bats to such an extent they feel compelled to tear the throats out of their unsuspecting victims.
 
“Devil Bat Diary” tells for the first time the full inside story of what took place in ways not possible to show to Production Code audiences back then: such as Chief Wilkins being in love with Layton, or that Mary was a religious lunatic, or that Maxine the French Maid does not was “zee Devil Bat” to be killed and that Layton and his partner “One-Shot” McGuire couldn’t stand the sight of each other!
 
Written to coincide with the 70th Anniversary of the film’s release and dedicated to the eternal memory of Bela Lugosi, “Devil Bat Diary” is an unforgettably entertaining venture into a world filled with chirping Chiropterans, malicious murders, sacred sex and revolting revelations.
 
(Peter H. Brothers is also the author of “Mushroom Clouds and Mushroom Men – The Fantastic Cinema of Ishiro Honda.”)

Monday, July 25, 2011

THE IRON HORSE (Masters of Cinema)

 To be released in the UK on DVD on 26 September 2011

112_THE_IRON_HORSE_DVD_72dpi.jpg

SYNOPSIS:

The 1924 blockbuster that launched John Ford into Hollywood's emerging A-list of directors, The Iron Horse is an epic mythification of the American railroad's birth: a rambunctious blend of historical drama and Western actioner, revenge story and saloon comedy, noble biopic and all-bets-off tall tale.

Neighbour to the pre-presidential Abe Lincoln in Springfield, Illinois, young Davy Brandon accompanies his father westward to realise the elder's dream of a rail line bridging the ends of the continent. Years after Brandon Sr.'s murder and scalping by a two-fingered Cheyenne half-breed, the adult David (played by George O'Brien, three years before his lead role in Sunrise, here in the first of ten films he made with Ford) joins in the effort now underway to lay track and accommodate "the iron horse". Once more stir the blood and butterflies of Davy's past as Ford guides his characters' fates towards final convergence, like the merging of the tracks from east and west.

With its expressive compositional prowess, incredible stunt work, and generous humour, The Iron Horse anticipates the bounteous universe that Ford would go on to calibrate perfectly in his greatest works. The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present The Iron Horse in its US, full-length version for the first time on DVD in the UK.

The first smash hit in the career of one of Hollywood's greatest and most enduringly popular directors: John Ford (The Searchers, StagecoachThe Quiet ManShe Wore a Yellow RibbonFort Apache, etc.), The Iron Horse was one of the great blockbusters of Hollywood's silent era, with over 6000 extras at work on the film, it is the grandfather of all Westerns.  The Iron Horse is released in a 2-disc DVD set on 26 September 2011.


SPECIAL TWO-DISC DVD EDITION FEATURING:

• Original, US, 150-minute version of the film, accompanied by a 2007 score by Christopher Caliendo 
• Shorter, UK, 133-minute version of the film (which includes alternate takes), accompanied by an adaptation of the Caliendo score  
• Audio commentary for the UK version of the film by scholar Robert Birchard  
 New and exclusive 30-minute video essay by Tag Gallagher, author of John Ford: The Man and His Films   
• A lengthy illustrated booklet containing vintage press and publicity material, and more!
   

DETAILS:

Label: Eureka Entertainment Ltd

Catalogue No: EKA40339 (RETAIL ONLY)
Barcode: 5060000403398
RRP: £20.42
Release Date: 26 September 2011
Certificate: PG
Run Time: 150 + 133 min approx.
Format:  1.37:1 OAR/ B&W
Genre: Silent/ Western
Director: John FORD
Year: 1924
Country:  USA
Language: Silent (English)

Viscera Film Festival, Las Vegas

Scream Queen Shannon Lark, the first ever spooksmodel for Fangoria, says audiences that attend her Viscera Film Festival can expect "surreal, hilarious, twisted, depressing, and dark" films.

"It's a mix of horror films that go across the board," Lark said. "Expect to get a glimpse at where the genre is going in the future."
 
Now in its fifth year as the only non-profit event devoted to women filmmakers in the horror genre, the Viscera Film Festival makes its first stop in Las Vegas for two nights of screenings July 29-30 at theatre7 (1406 South 3rd Street, Las Vegas, NV 89104 in the downtown Arts District). Other tour stops this year have included San Francisco, Athens, Ga., Seattle, Houston, Dallas and Rome. 
 
The Vegas leg of the Viscera world tour will feature more than 30 short horror films over two days. Ginnetta Corelli, Gigi Romero, Nikki Wall, Briony Kidd, Emily Carmichael, Mae Catt, and Staci Laye Wilson are among the filmmakers that have shorts screening.

Viscera was started in 2007 after Lark gathered up several friends and made a short horror film in San Francisco. She says she had an epiphany regarding the potential of getting women in a positive environment where they can support each other, and how that could affect the film industry. Thus, Viscera was born.
 
Viscera's official 2011 world tour kick off was July 17 in Los Angeles with a red carpet event. The sold-out screening was hosted by Lark and director of programming Heidi Honeycutt at the Silent Movie Theatre. 
 
Lark said she is happy to have the event finally playing Las Vegas and hopes the stop at theatre7 will help the films get more exposure to genre fans and the festival circuit.  
 
"It's always thrilling to hear if any of the Viscera films are screening somewhere," Lark said. "It means that we are doing our job in honoring these filmmakers, which is what festivals should do." 
 
For more information on the Viscera Film Festival, visit http://www.viscerafilmfestival.com/ . 
 
Located near the "Downtown Las Vegas" sign, theatre7 is an artlover's and indie film fan's paradise. Owned, programmed and operated by filmmakers, theatre7 screens independent films, doubles as an art gallery and host live entertainment.  
 
For more information on theatre7, visit http://theatre7lv.com .

theatre7 Viscera Film Festival Lineup

Friday, July 29
7 p.m., $7
Adventure Girls by Dara Jade Moats and Jon Deitcher
Nursery Crimes by Laura Whyte
Mockingbird by Marichelle Daywalt
Bon Apetit by Kate Shenton
Candy by Sage Hall
The Ghost and Us by Emily Carmichael
The Many Doors of Albert Whale by Marichelle Daywalt
Together by Gigi Romero
Box by Nikki Wall
7/28/1989 by Mae Catt
Gasp by Thomai Hatsios
A Fever and a River by Rachael Deacon
Mary Jane Go Round by Ginnetta Corelli
The Bride by Ana Almeida
The Room at the Top of the Stairs by Briony Kidd

Saturday, July 30
7 p.m., $7
Barbee Butcher by Sophie Laques
I’m a Little Teapot by Sallie Smith
Blood Bunny by Molly Madfis
Salome’s Picnic by Victoria Waghorn
Aftershock by Lori Bowen
The Date by Natasia Schibinger and Jennifer Gigantino
Switch by Melanie Light
Consumed by Lis Fies
Snow Day, Bloody Snow Day by Jessica Baxter and Faye Hoerauf
I was a Tranny Werewolf by Lola Rock ‘n’ Rolla
The Key to Annabel Lee by Staci Laye Wilson
Don’t Lose Heart by Taliesyn Brown and Matt Mitchell
The Party’s Over by Gigi Romero
12/15/1996 by Mae Catt
Doll Parts by Karen Lam
Fantasy by Izabel Grondin
Lip Stick by Shannon Lark
Belated by Valentines Lover by Ruby La’Rocca


2011 Viscera Film Festival World Tour - Las Vegas
July 29-30
7 p.m.
$7 each night
theatre7
1406 S. 3rd Street
Las Vegas, NV 89014

The Force To Be Released Later this Year

Twentieth Century Fox presents John Abraham and Genelia D’Souza in one of the boldest action-romances of contemporary Indian Cinema

Prepare to be engulfed by ‘FORCE’ when the action, passion and drama come alive in cinemas across UK and worldwide in Autumn 2011. Released through Twentieth Century Fox, ‘FORCE’ features two of the hottest stars of Indian cinema, John Abraham (‘Dostana’, ‘New York’, the Oscar-nominated ‘Water’) and Genelia D’Souza (‘Life Partner’, Jaane Tu... Ya Jaane Na’), in this most awaited action romance film of the year.  

A stylised thriller among the new wave of Indian films paying homage to the seminal Indian action genre, ‘FORCE’ combines state-of-the-art fight sequences and thrills with an original romantic narrative, delivering an abundance of on-screen energy and vigor that will have audiences gripped from the opening sequence to the end credits. 

Directed by the critically acclaimed, Filmfare and National Award winning Nishikant Kamat ‘FORCE’ is a contemporary action romance and a Hindi reinterpretation of the Tamil blockbuster, ‘Kaakha Kaakha’, which achieved widespread popularity among audiences and critics alike. ‘FORCE’ is produced by Vipul Amrutlal Shah who previously brought cinemagoers screen gems such as ‘Aakhen’, ‘Singh is Kinng’ and ‘Namastey London’.  

At the heart of the action-love story is a renegade cop, played by John Abraham, in relentless pursuit of a ruthless, underworld gangster. He believes that the only way to eradicate crime is to give criminals the bullet – not hand cuffs. The hype is already astir around the pin-up star’s infamous eight-pack physique to be unveiled in the film. Sharing screen space with John is one of the most vivacious and exuberant talents to join the ranks of Indian screen beauties, as Genelia D’Souza plays John’s love interest. The seat-grabbing suspense is perfectly balanced with passionate romance and a melodious soundtrack, masterfully composed by one of the leading Indian music composers, Harris Jayaraj.   

A combination of real visceral action and an intense love story, the film promises to leave an impact. Get ready for a high-octane cinematic experience when ‘FORCE’ releases in cinemas in the UK and worldwide in Autumn 2011 through Twentieth Century Fox. 


Saturday, July 23, 2011

HARAKIRI (1962) (Masters of Cinema) is to be released in the UK

Supplied in a Dual Format Blu-ray + DVD edition on 26 September 2011

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SYNOPSIS:

Of all Masaki Kobayashi's attacks on the cruelty and inhumanity perpetrated by authoritarian power (including The Human Condition and Samurai Rebellion), perhaps none are more brilliant than his visceral, mesmerising Harakiri [aka Seppuku].

In a magnificent performance, Tatsuya Nakadai (Yojimbo, The Face of Another, Ran) stars as Hanshiro Tsugumo, a masterless down-and-out samurai who enters the manor of Lord Iyi, requesting to commit ritual suicide on his property. Suspected of simply fishing for charity, Hanshiro is told the gruesome tale of the last samurai who made the same request – but Hanshiro will not be moved…

With its intricate structure and pressure-cooker atmosphere, Kobayashi's first jidai-geki period drama is a full-scale demolition job of samurai ideals and feudal hypocrisy, filmed with artistry and surgical precision, and scored by celebrated composer Toru Takemitsu. Adapted from the same source novel in 2011 by notorious auteur Takashi Miike, the original – winner of the 1963 Special Jury Prize at Cannes – still stands as a startling moment in Japanese cinema.

The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present the UK home viewing première of one of the great blood-soaked revenge epics of the cinema, alongside Oldboy, Kill Bill, and Dead Man's Shoes.   Harakiri will be released in a Dual Format Blu-ray + DVD edition on 26 September 2011.


SPECIAL DUAL-FORMAT EDITION FEATURES:

• New, officially licensed, Shochiku high-definition transfer (1080p on Blu-ray) 
• New and improved English subtitle translation 
• Original theatrical trailer 
• Excerpt from a 1993 Directors Guild of Japan interview with Masaki Kobayashi discussing the film with director Masahiro Shinoda 
• An illustrated 28-page booklet featuring a new essay by film critic Philip Kemp, a 1963 interview with Kobayashi, and rare archival production stills
   

DETAILS:

Label: Eureka Entertainment Ltd

Catalogue No: EKA70034 (RETAIL ONLY)
Barcode: 5060000700343
RRP: £23.48
Release Date: 26 September 2011
Certificate: TBC
Run Time: 133 min. approx.
Format:  2.35:1 OAR/ B&W
Genre: World Cinema
Director: Masaki KOBAYASHI
Year: 1962
Country:  Japan
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English (Optional)

Friday, July 22, 2011

BFI MARKS KEN LOACH’S 75TH BIRTHDAY WITH MAJOR PROJECT

July 20th 2011

In September 2011 the BFI will mark Ken Loach’s 75th birthday, and 50-year career in film and television, with the most comprehensive retrospective ever of his work.

Ken Loach is a filmmaker with an outstanding international reputation both as a hugely talented craftsman and as a radical social and political commentator; the retrospective will explore the full range of Loach’s films, television plays and documentaries. In full collaboration with Loach himself, this major BFI project incorporates a donation of Loach’s collection to the BFI National Archive, a two-month BFI Southbank season and Mezzanine exhibition, regional tour, an education programme and Screenonline and Mediatheque programmes.

Ken Loach said, “I am of course delighted that the BFI will show all these films.
However, I can’t help feeling a little anxious about what will be revealed…”

Winner of the Palme d’or at Cannes 2006 for The Wind That Shakes the Barley Ken Loach is one of Britain’s most celebrated and socially committed film-makers. He began his career in media production 50 years ago when he joined BBC Television’s drama department as a trainee director and went on to make ground-breaking television plays which are among the most important ever broadcast, such as Cathy Come Home or Up the Junction. His pioneering methods and gritty social realism had a huge influence on many filmmakers today including Shane Meadows, Paul Greengrass, Peter Mullan and many more. Loach’s career is full of richly rewarding films, from compelling accounts of contemporary life such as Riff-Raff and Looking for Eric, as well as engaging political dramas such as Hidden Agenda or Land and Freedom. Above all these are passionate, well-crafted works of cinema with a universal appeal which transcend their geographical location.

The entire Ken Loach project is supported by a generous donation of £200,000 from the Esmée Fairbaiurn Foundation

Dawn Austwick, Chief Executive, said, “Esmée Fairbairn Foundation has for 50 years proudly supported civil society to achieve lasting change and improve people’s lives. As part of our 50th birthday celebrations, we are pleased to be working with the British Film Institute to help preserve the unique works of Ken Loach, which provide us with invaluable insight into the social history of modern Britain.


SAVE THE CHILDREN FILM – WORLD PREMIERE
Ken Loach has never shied away from controversy in either his work or his personal political involvement. Several documentary projects have been effectively banned from transmission, including his 1969 film for Save the Children, which has only been viewed by a handful of BFI archivists in over 40 years. The film was mired in controversy and withdrawn under an injunction by Save the Children. The BFI are grateful to Save the Children for their permission to screen the film to launch the Ken Loach project at BFI Southbank on 1st September 2011.

THE KEN LOACH COLLECTION
Loach has donated to the BFI National Archive his entire archive of working papers including his emails. This precious hoard includes extensive production papers and working notes, casting lists, budgets, shooting schedules and annotated drafts and shooting scripts – even an Eric Cantona mask from Looking for Eric. A continuity script for Kes, full of on-location photographs, sits alongside scene breakdowns, early drafts and even notes on the process of training a kestrel. Correspondence to and from collaborators such as Jim Allen also includes letters of appreciation from fans as diverse as Alan Bennett and Neil Kinnock. The Channel 4 Duty log after a broadcast of Which Side are You On? illustrates the passionate response that Loach’s work evokes, among those both for and against. The cataloguing of the collection is bound to uncover more fascinating insights into the work which will be of great interest to students in higher and further education, studying politics, history, or film as well as interested members of the public. Digital copies of key Loach documents chosen by BFI expert curators will be able to be consulted on the BFI website next year, thanks to the grant from the Esmée Fairbairn Trust.

Heather Stewart, Creative Director, BFI said, “We are delighted to accept this extraordinarily generous gift by one of Britain’s most internationally renowned and important filmmakers. Ken Loach has created an outstanding body of work and through this donation we will be able to preserve his films to the highest archival standards while offering a unique insight into his working methods.”

BFI SOUTHBANK
This is the most comprehensive retrospective of the works of Ken Loach ever mounted covering his feature films, television and documentary work. Many of Loach’s best known collaborators such as producer Rebecca O’Brien, editor Jonathan Morris, writer Paul Laverty and producer Tony Garnett will be taking part in a range of events and introduced screenings. Ken Loach himself will launch the season with a screening of the Save the Children film and will also introduce Land and Freedom (one of his personal favourites).

An exhibition of materials from the newly donated Ken Loach collection will be on show alongside other Loach items from the BFI’s collections in a dedicated display in the Mezzanine gallery at BFI Southbank. Opens September 2011.



UK-WIDE/REGIONAL SCREENINGS
The landmark retrospective of Ken Loach’s work for film and television screened at BFI Southbank in September and October will also have selected screenings in Bath, Sheffield, Belfast and Glasgow. Titles already confirmed include Carla’s Song, My Name is Joe, Sweet Sixteen, and Ae Fond Kiss which will screen at the Glasgow Film Theatre. Kes, The Wind That Shakes the Barley, Hidden Agenda and My Name is Joe screen at Queen’s Film Theatre, BelfastKes, The Game Keeper, The Price of Coal, Looks and Smiles and The Wind That Shakes the Barley will screen at Sheffield Showroom.

Each venue will also have a programme of educational events and special guests.

SCREENONLINE
The BFI’s online guide to British film and television (www.screenonline.org.uk) will present a thorough, in-depth account of Loach’s work in film, television and documentary, as well as two new short films about Ken Loach and some of his key collaborators: Loach: The TV Years has producer Tony Garnett and writer Nell Dunn recalling their work on The Wednesay Play; while a focus on Sweet Sixteen will explore Loach’s unique aesthetic and collaborative approach, with cinematographer Barry Ackroyd, long-time editor Jonathan Morris and actor Martin Compston.

MEDIATHEQUE
An expansive retrospective of Ken Loach’s film and television work will be available to view for free at the BFI Mediatheques in London (BFI Southbank), Derby (QUAD centre for art and film), Cambridge (Central Library), Newcastle upon Tyne (Discovery Museum), and Wrexham (Main Library).

This major addition to the Mediatheque’s collections will encompass complete feature films and TV programmes from the 1960s to today, including titles unavailable to the public for many years

EDUCATION
New materials and on-line guides for teachers will be produced by BFI Education for those involved in teaching about the films of Ken Loach.

A series of nationwide competitions will be run:
·         Should British filmmakers be more independent?
A young journalist competition in association with Sight & Sound magazine (16 – 25yr olds)
·         Between the Lines A writing competition encouraging young people inspired by Loach’s challenging approach, to champion alternative stories which challenge the establishment (10 – 25yrs in three age bands).

Events for schools will take place at BFI Southbank and at regional venues.

Film: 21st Century Literacy partners - All partners are supporting the Loach Project and the Between the Lines competition.  FILMCLUB are promoting the competition to schools UK-wide and curating two special seasons of films, with accompanying online teaching guides:
§         10 films directed by Loach, showcasing why his work connects for children and young people.
§         ‘Tell It Like It Is’: 10 British films which share Loach's sensibility and humour
Film Education will organise during National Schools Film Week free screenings, UK-wide, of Route Irish and an on-line resource for teachers; and will promote the competition to schools UK-wide. First Light are managing the competition.

NEW BOOK: THE POLITICS OF FILM AND TELEVISION
John Hill's definitive study looks at the career and work of British director Ken Loach. From his early television work (Cathy Come Home) through to landmark films (Kes) and examinations of British society (Looking For Eric) this landmark study reveals Loach as one of the great European directors. Paperback £16.99 BFI/Palgrave Macmillan – out now.

MEDIA PARTNERS
The Ken Loach project is presented with our media partners:
New Statesman magazine and Sight & Sound magazine.

                  

                                 
BFI SOUTHBANK RETROSPECTIVE IN FULL

Ken Loach season notes by John Hill, author of Ken Loach: The Politics of Film and Television

 ‘Ken Loach is a national treasure’, one critic has observed. ‘It just seems that the nation that produced him is not always keen to treasure him’. On the one hand, Loach is the most distinguished English filmmaker at work today, responsible for some of the most memorable British film and television productions of the last five decades. On the other hand, he has never become a fully accepted member of the political or fIIm establishments and has retained a certain ‘outsider’ status by virtue of his relish for work that provokes controversy and arouses debate. Loach has consistently chosen to use television and film as a way of drawing attention to the political problems faced by ‘ordinary’ people at the bottom of the social ladder. He has also sought to represent them in a way that he regards as faithful to the actuality of their lives. Thus while initially infl uenced by the anti-naturalistic polemics of Troy Kennedy Martin, Loach since evolved a ‘realist’ style characterised by location shooting, a mix of professional and non-professional actors and a pared-down observational mode of camerawork that maintains a respectful distance from the action. However, while it is relatively easy to identify distinctive ‘Loachian’ themes and stylistic traits, Loach has always resisted the label of ‘auteur’ on the grounds that filmmaking is a collective endeavour. This has meant that he has sought to maintain regular relationships with trusted collaborators, including writers Jim Allen, Barry Hines and Paul Laverty, producers Tony Garnett, Sally Hibbin and Rebecca O’Brien, cameramen Chris Menges and Barry Ackroyd, editors Roy Watts and Jonathan Morris, designers Martin Johnson and Fergus Clegg and composer George Fenton. So, while the current season provides an opportunity to trace the development of Loach’s work over 45 years, it is also a record of the creative partnerships that have enabled one of British cinema’s most distinctive, politically radical filmmakers to continue to be seen and heard.

Save the Children Film: World Premiere
A special opportunity to see a film never before screened. In 1969 Kestrel Films were commissioned by Save the Children to make a film portraying its work, to mark the 50th anniversary of the charity and intended for broadcast on London Weekend Television. Already a fiercely political filmmaker, Loach opened the film with a quotation from Friedrich Engels, and went on to construct a film that explored the politics of race, class and charity in capitalist society. At that time Save the Children representatives felt the film subverted their aims. The ensuing dispute meant that Save the Children did not agree to a public screening of the work, which resulted in its preservation within the BFI National Archive.

Forty years later we are delighted to show the film for the first time ever, in partnership with Save the Children, to launch the BFI’s Loach retrospective. Produced by Tony Garnett and shot by Chris Menges, this is a unique slice of British social and cinematic history.
Followed by a discussion with Ken Loach and representatives of Save the Children and the BFI National Archive.
Presented in association with Save the Children
Thu 1 Sept 18:20 NFT1

The Politics of Documentary
When Ken Loach sought to expose the corruption and concealed agendas of
the political establishment through a series of documentaries produced for
television in the 1980s, he found himself silenced and marginalised. Exploring controversial questions of political bias and censorship in the British media, then and now, we are delighted to welcome Ken Loach and guests to a discussion chaired by Jonathan Derbyshire, Culture Editor of the New Statesman.
Mon 19 Sept 18:20 NFT1

Up the Junction
BBC 1965. With Geraldine Sherman, Carol White, Vickery Turner, Tony Selby. 72min
Described by producer Tony Garnett as ‘not a play, a documentary, or a
musical’ but ‘all of these at once’, Up the Junction was a groundbreaking
production of Nell Dunn’s novel of working-class life. Although hated by
Mary Whitehouse for its treatment of a backstreet abortion, the production’s
energetic female cast and exuberant sense of artistic experiment make it
compelling.
Plus Auditions (1980, 60min): A rarely-seen documentary that follows three dancers searching for work following the end of the summer  at Great Yarmouth.
*Introduced by film editor Jonathan Morris
Fri 2 Sept 18:00 NFT2*
Sun 4 Sept 20:10 NFT2

Cathy Come Home
BBC 1966. With Ray Brooks. 77min
Arguably the most famous drama ever made for British television, Cathy Come
Home’s heartbreaking tale of family break-up in the face of homelessness
pricked the conscience of the nation. While there were complaints about
the mixing of drama and documentary, only the most stony-hearted could
fail to be moved by Carol White’s luminous performance as the luckless
‘everywoman’, Cathy.
Also screens during Crisis event
Sat 3 Sept 16:10 NFT2


Poor Cow
UK 1967. 101min. 15
Loach returned to a Nell Dunn novel for his fi rst feature film and his fi rst
work to be shot in colour. Starring Carol White and Terence Stamp as an ill-starred romantic couple, it also proved to be a surprise commercial hit.
Although Loach has since expressed reservations about its ‘modishness’, it
remains a key film of the 1960s for its sardonic take on the ‘swinging sixties’
and happy-go-lucky mixing of social observation and Godardian modernism.
Sat 3 Sept 20:20 NFT2
Thu 8 Sept 20:20 NFT2*
Sat 3 Sept 18:00 NFT2
Tue 6 Sept 20:40 NFT2
Wed 7 Sept 20:40 NFT2

The Golden Vision
BBC 1968. With Ken Jones, Bill Dean,
Neville Smith. 60min
Focusing on a group of dedicated Everton fans, The Golden Vision combines
fictional scenes (performed by a sparkling cast of local club entertainers)
with documentary material of Everton offi cials and players.One of Loach’s
most relaxed and straightforwardly enjoyable works. Plus After a Lifetime
(ITV 1971, 71min): Reuniting many of the cast from The Golden Vision, Neville
Smith’s semi- autobiographical story mourns the loss of the revolutionary
spirit of an earlier generation.
*Introduced by Neville Smith
Sat 3 Sept 20:20 NFT2
Thu 8 Sept 20:20 NFT2*

Kes
UK 1969. With Lynn Perrie, Freddie Fletcher, Colin Welland, Brian Glover.
112min. Digital PG
Arguably Loach’s best-known work and regularly cited as one of the best
British films of all time, Kes was the first of a series of collaborations with
writer Barry Hines (and cinematographer Chris Menges). Dealing with a young
Barnsley boy’s rapport with a kestrel, the film was shot with a predominantly
non-professional cast in a spare observational style. Newcomer David
Bradley gives a fine performance as the schoolboy let down by the education system.
Fri 9 – Sat 24 Sept
Seniors’ Matinee (with introduction)
Fri 9 Sept 14:00 NFT1

Family Life
UK 1971. With Bill Dean, Grace Cave, Malcolm Tierney. 108min. 15
A remake of David Mercer’s In Two Minds, which Loach had previously
made for The Wednesday Play series. Drawing on RD Laing’s critique
of the diagnosis and treatment of‘schizophrenia’, the film charts – in
an uncluttered observational style – the way in which an oppressive family
structure and an unsympathetic medical establishment exacerbates,
rather than ‘cures’, the ‘illness’ of the female lead, Janice (played with
heartfelt conviction by newcomer Sandy Ratcliff).
Sun 4 Sept 17:50 NFT2
Mon 12 Sept 21:00 NFT2

Days of Hope
BBC 1975. With Paul Copley,
Pamela Brighton, Nikolas Simmonds, Alun Armstrong. 97min + 104min +
81min + 133min
Consisting of four television films dealing with the Great War through to
the 1926 General Strike, Days of Hope represents something of a high-water
mark for Loach in terms of scale of production, artistic achievement
and political ambition. Despite the inevitable press denunciations of its
‘left-wingery’, it was left to Stephen Frears to point out that no British
film ‘made for cinema distribution’could compare ‘in importance with
Days of Hope’.
Joint ticket available £20.70, concs
£13.75 (Members pay £1.50 less)
Days of Hope – 1916:
Joining Up
Sat 10 Sept 13:30 NFT2*
Days of Hope – 1921
Sat 10 Sept 15:40 NFT2
Days of Hope – 1924
Sat 10 Sept 18:10 NFT2
Days of Hope – 1926:
General Strike
Sat 10 Sept 20:20 NFT2
*Introduced by Paul Copley

The Price of Coal
BBC 1977. Part One: Meet the People + Part Two: Back to Reality. With Bobby Knutt, Duggie Brown, Rita May, Jackie Shinn. Total 150min
Set in a Yorkshire coalmine, Part One of these two made-for-television
films provides a wry observation of the absurdities surrounding the
preparations for a royal visit while Part Two deals with a pit accident that
leaves men trapped underground. Extracting excellent performances
from a cast largely made up of local club entertainers and nonprofessionals,
The Price of Coal is both a carefully observed drama of pit-head life and a moving plea for improvements in safety conditions
Sat 17 Sept 15:20 NFT2


Black Jack
UK 1979. With Stephen Hirst, Louise Cooper, Jean Franval, Phil Askham. 110 min. Video. U
Loach’s own adaptation of a children’s novel by Leon Garfield, Black Jack is set in Yorkshire in the 18th century and tells the story of a young lad forced to go on the run with the criminal “Black Jack”. Although relatively unloved at the time of its release, Black Jack has since been rediscovered and praised for its evocation of the period, distinctive visual style and folk music soundtrack.
Sun 4 Sept 15:30 NFT2
Sun 18 Sept 15.10 NFT2


The Gamekeeper
ITV 1980. With Phil Askham, Rita May, Andrew Grubb. 84min
Although made for ATV’s Documentary department, and described at the time as a ‘dramatised documentary’, The Gamekeeper is, in fact, an adaptation of a novel by Barry Hines dealing with a year in the life of a gamekeeper on a
country estate in South Yorkshire. An unusual piece for Loach insofar as it
deals with rural life, its emphasis upon work and class relations links it firmly
to his other films. Plus Which Side Are You On? (1985, 53min): Made during
the coal dispute of 1984-5, and providing an invigorating documentary
record of the ‘stories, poems and experiences’ inspired by the miners’ fight against pit closures.
Wed 7 Sept 18:00 NFT2
Fri 16 Sept 20:20 NFT2

Looks and Smiles
UK 1981. With Graham Green, Tony Pitts,
Carolyn Nicholson. 104min. Video. 15
Scripted by Barry Hines, Looks and Smiles was partly conceived as a follow-up to Kes in which a schoolleaver embarks upon a search for his
first job. Making it in the early years of Thatcherism, Loach later complained
that the film was insufficiently critical of government policies. Nevertheless,
beautifully shot in black and white by Chris Menges, the film is one of
Loach’s most visually arresting and quietly eloquent works.
Fri 9 Sept 18:20 NFT2
Sun 18 Sept 20:40 NFT2

Hidden Agenda
UK 1990. With Frances McDormand, Brian Cox, Brad Dourif, Mai Zetterling, Maurice Roeves. 108min. 15
Loosely based on John Stalker’s enquiry into the alleged ‘shoot to kill’ policy in
Northern Ireland in the early 1980s, this political thriller was denounced as
a ‘pro-IRA’ film by Conservative MP Ivor Stanbrook when first shown at
Cannes. The film itself, however, was not really about the IRA at all but how the actions of the British secret services can threaten civil rights and democratic accountability not only in Northern Ireland but in Britain as well.
*Introduced by producer Rebecca O’Brien
Fri 9 Sept 20:30 NFT2
Sun 11 Sept 18:10 NFT2
Thu 15 Sept 18:20 NFT2*

Riff-Raff
UK 1991. With Emer McCourt,
Jimmy Coleman. 96min. 15
Based on Bill Jesse’s reminiscences of working on building sites, Riff-Raff
signalled a return to familiar terrain for Loach following experiments with
the European art film (Fatherland) and political thriller (Hidden Agenda).
Bringing together a strong cast that included Robert Carlyle and Ricky
Tomlinson, the film celebrates the humour and camaraderie of men
forced to work in uncongenial conditions but also reveals how these
become subject to strain in the face of unscrupulous employment practices
Sun 11 Sept 20:50 NFT2
Wed 14 Sept 20:30 NFT2
Sat 17 Sept 18:30 NFT2

Raining Stones
UK 1993. With Bruce Jones, Julie Brown,
Ricky Tomlinson. 91min. 15
Shot on the run-down Middleton estate in Manchester where writer Jim
Allen had once lived, Raining Stones focuses on an unemployed man’s descent into debt when faced with his daughter’s forthcoming communion. Although some of Loach and Allen’s admirers were surprised by the film’s
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