Showing posts with label alfred hitchcock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alfred hitchcock. Show all posts

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Downton Abbey flies the flag for Brits with 12 nods at the Emmys... while Benedict Cumberbatch, Helen Mirren and Damian Lewis are also nominated (MAIL ON LINE) By EMILY SHERIDAN PUBLISHED: 09:13 EST, 18 July 2013 | UPDATED: 13:24 EST, 18 July 2013

Who they will? Hugh Bonneville as Earl Of Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary CrawleyWho they will? Hugh Bonneville as Earl Of Grantham and Michelle Dockery as Lady Mary Crawley

Period drama Downton Abbey is leading the way for the Brits as this year's Emmy Awards, with 12 nominations.

The ITV series, which runs on PBS in the US, has received major nominations, including acting nods for stars Hugh Bonneville, Michelle Dockery, Dame Maggie Smith and Jim Carter.

Hugh is up for Outstanding Lead Actor In A Drama Series for his performance as Earl of Grantham, while his on-screen daughter Michelle is up for Outstanding Lead Actress In A Drama Series as Lady Mary Crawley.

Creator Julian Fellowes has received a nod for Outstanding Writing In A Drama Series, while the show is also up for Directing and Best Drama Series.



Last year's Best Actor In A Drama Series Damian Lewis is up in the category again for the second year.

The Oscar winner has already won four Emmys already for Prime suspect, Elizabeth I and The Passion of Ayn Rand, her last win being in 1996.



Brits Toby Jones and Benedict Cumberbatch will go head-to-head in the Outstanding Lead Actor In A Miniseries Or A Movie for The Girl and Parade's End respectively.

Toby's The Girl co-star Imelda Staunton, who played Alfred Hitchcock's wife Alma is nominated for Supporting Actress in a Miniseries Or A Movie, although Sienna Miller missed out on a nod for her performance as Tippi Hedren.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2368777/Emmy-nominations-2013-Downton-Abbey-flies-flag-Brits-12-nods--Helen-Mirren-Damian-Lewis-nominated.html#ixzz2ZRa780cM 
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Friday, May 24, 2013

Benedict Cumberbatch, Damian Lewis: British Stars In The Running For US TV Awards

Stars of Homeland and Parade's End head the British nominations for major television awards across the Pond.



By JENNY MANNING
Published: 23rd May 2013
  
DAMIAN Lewis and Benedict Cumberbatch are among a host of stars flying the flag for Britain at the 2013 American Critics’ Choice Television Awards.

The two actors have been honoured with nominations for their performances in Homeland and BBC mini-series Parade’s End respectively.

Lewis, whose Homeland co-star Claire Danes is also nominated, faces competition for best actor from fellow Brits Andrew Lincoln and Matthew Rhys, together with Kevin Spacey, Bryan Cranston and Timothy Olyphant.

Cumberbatch will battle it out against Behind The Candelabra stars Michael Douglas and Matt Damon, as well as Toby Jones, Al Pacino and Dominic West, in the best actor in a movie or mini-series field.

While Brit actresses Sienna Miller and Imelda Staunton have received nods for their portrayals of Tippi Hedren and Alfred Hitchcock’s wife Alma Reville in the BBC and HBO TV drama The Girl.


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Cary Grant: Eight Things You Probably Didn’t Know About Cary Grant by JANE BOURSAW on APRIL 9, 2013 · 2:00 PM ·(REEL LIFE WITH JANE)



1. From 1932 to 1942, he shared a house with Randolph Scott, whom he met on “Hot Saturday” in 1932. Scott often jokingly referred to Grant as his spouse. The 1940 census report shows Scott as head of household and Grant as his partner.

2. He loved the board game “Trivial Pursuit,” and played it shortly before his death in 1986.

3. He never said the words “Judy, Judy, Judy.” The famous quote is actually attributed to Larry Storch, a professional impersonator who greeted Julie Garland as she walked in during one of his comedy sets.

4. Cary was actually British, and became a U.S. citizen on June 26, 1942, changing his name from Archie Leach to Cary Grant.

5. He was offered the role of James Bond in “Dr. No,” but turned it down because at 58, felt he was too old. Ian Fleming is said to have modeled Bond partially after Grant.

6. He starred in 72 films throughout his career and never played the role of the villain.

7. Alfred Hitchcock is rumored to have said of Grant, “He’s the only actor I ever loved in my whole life.”



READ MORE: http://www.reellifewithjane.com/2013/04/eight-things-you-probably-didnt-know-about-cary-grant/

Friday, January 4, 2013

British roots of stars Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor published Robin Turner, WalesOnline Jan 4 2013



The British roots of some of Hollywood’s biggest stars including Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor have been published online for the first time.

Millions of United States census records are included in the collection, detailing British actors and actresses who moved to the US during the golden age of movies.

The 1940 US Federal Census Records, now being published by family history website Ancestry.co.uk, includes the names of Elizabeth Taylor, born in Hampstead Garden Suburb, London and Port Talbot’s Richard Burton.

The files also include London born Alfred Hitchcock, currently being played in a biopic of his life by another Port Talbot actor, Sir Anthony Hopkins, who moved to the US to direct some of the best-known films of all time, such as Psycho and The Birds.



Read more: Wales Online http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2013/01/04/british-roots-of-hollywood-stars-richard-burton-and-elizabeth-taylor-91466-32544953/#ixzz2H1BmTrbK

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Helen Mirren recalls the 'Frenzy' of auditioning as a young actress for the real 'Hitchcock' Oscar winner plays his wife in a 'Psycho' drama starring Anthony Hopkins as the famed film director BY ETHAN SACKS / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS


Helen Mirren: 'I didn't like Hitchcock very much [in 1972], and he didn't like me very much either.'

It’s no mystery what drove Helen Mirren to star in “Hitchcock.”

Long before she was an Academy Award winner (for 2006’s “The Queen”) and a Dame, Mirren was a young stage actress in London auditioning for the real Master of Suspense as he was preparing to shoot his second-to-last film, “Frenzy,” back in 1972.

“I didn’t like Hitchcock very much, and he didn’t like me very much either,” Mirren tells the News. “It was not a good meeting at all. I guess it was a kind of audition, but I didn’t really want to be in the movie.

“I had no appreciation of who Alfred Hitchcock was. He was just an old-fashioned guy making old-fashioned movies, as far as I was concerned. I was ignorant and prejudiced.”

Forty years later, Mirren had the chance to correct an impetuousness of youth — if not to work with Hitchcock directly, then get to do the next best thing.

In “Hitchcock,” opening today, the 67-year-old actress stars as Alma Reville, the wife, frequent editor and moral compass of the legendary filmmaker.

Based on Stephen Rebello’s nonfiction book “Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of ‘Psycho,’” the tongue-in-cheek drama focuses on the couple’s uphill battle to film what would become the director’s signature hit. The movie also chronicles how they struggled to keep their marriage together in the process.

History has proven 1960’s “Psycho” to be Hitchcock’s most successful work and a genre-sparking thriller. But Alfred and Alma risked losing their home to finance it themselves. Getting the project through the censors and the studio, Universal, was murder.


Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv-movies/helen-mirren-recalls-meeting-real-hitchcock-article-1.1205840#ixzz2DTW75L5z

Sunday, November 25, 2012

British Actors who rejected the Queen's Honors (DIGITAL SPY)

British actor Alan Rickman rejected a CBE from the Queen.

 Alfred Hitchcock rejected a CBE in 1962 but accepted a knighthood from the Queen shortly before his death in 1980.

David Bowie reportedly rejected a CBE in 2000, explaining simply: "I seriously don't know what it's for."

 .John Lennon returned his MBE 1969, along with a letter to Her Majesty which read: "I am returning this in protest against Britain's involvement in the Nigeria-Biafra thing, against our support of America in Vietnam 

BAFTA-winning comedy duo Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French rejected an OBE back in 2001.

Skyfall actor Albert Finney turned down a CBE in 1980 and rejected a knighthood in 2000.

According to official government records, Oscar-winning actress Vanessa Redgrave also rejected an honour from the Queen.

Actor Bill Nighy reportedly declined the British Honour of CBE.

READ MORE: http://www.digitalspy.com/celebrity/i515184-8/stars-rejecting-the-queens-honours-bill-nighy.html

Friday, November 2, 2012

Review: Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren are simply stellar in 'Hitchcock' THE MOVIE CAN'T QUITE LIVE UP TO THE PERFORMANCES By Gregory Ellwood FRIDAY, NOV 2, 2012 4:32 AM (HIT FIX)


HOLLYWOOD – There have been many movies about the history of the movie industry, but it’s surprising it took this long for someone to bring the life of Alfred Hitchcock to the big screen.  The legendary filmmaker captained an impressive list of classic films including “Vertigo,” “North by Northwest,” “The 39 Steps,” “The Lady Vanishes” and “Dial M for Murder” among others.  And with his TV series “Alfred Hitchcock Presents…” he became one of the most recognizable directors and celebrities of the 1950’s.  His biggest hit, however, was one of his latter films, 1960’s “Psycho.”  Hitchcock’s obsession with making that “horror” film sets the stage for Sacha Gervasi’s  “Hitchcock,” which opened the 2012 AFI Film Fest Thursday night.

Coming off the success of “Northwest,” the picture finds Hitchcock (Anthony Hopkins) seemingly bored and uninterested in the numerous projects Hollywood is throwing his way.  That all changes, however, when he learns about Wisconsin serial killer Ed Gein (an almost unrecognizable Michael Wincott) who has stunned authorities by digging his mother up from the grave and murdering and then mutilating a number of young women.  The crimes inspired Robert Bloch to write the fiction novel “Psycho,” although at the time he claimed he didn’t realize how close his book about the off-kilter Norman Bates was to Gein’s own story.  Unfortunately for the famous filmmaker, Paramount Pictures – a studio that he owes one more film to – has no interest in funding “Psycho.” So, Hitchcock decides in order to feel creative again he'll mortgage his house and use his own savings to fund the $800,000 picture.


READ MORE:http://www.hitfix.com/awards-campaign/review-anthony-hopkins-and-helen-mirren-are-simply-stellar-in-hitchcock

Monday, October 29, 2012

'Hitchcock' trailer plus the new poster with Anthony Hopkins & Helen Mirren by Ethan Anderton October 29, 2012


The first poster for the behind-the-scenes drama Hitchcock, which chronicles the titular director and the trials and tribulations of making his horror classic Psycho, had a retro horror style. Anthony Hopkins stood in signature profile stance with snapshots of the rest of the cast including Scarlett Johansson, Jessica Biel, Helen Mirren and more. Now a new poster keeps the same style but with less graceful composition as Hitch merely stands with a knife, right next to Mirren as his wife Alma. It's nothing special, but the trailer for the movie speaks for itself anyway, so watch that if you haven't already.



READ MORE: http://www.firstshowing.net/2012/hitchcock-poster-stays-simple-with-anthony-hopkins-
helen-mirren/



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8VP5jEAP3K4&NR=1&feature=fvwp


Sunday, October 14, 2012

Toby Jones: Hitchcock mastered control -- as well as suspense -- with his actors (SIOUX CITY JOURNAL)



9 hours ago  •  BRUCE MILLER bmiller@siouxcityjournal.com 

LOS ANGELES | Tippi Hedren is convinced director Alfred Hitchcock didn't love her -- contrary to popular belief.

"When you love someone, you treat them well," the star of "The Birds" and "Marnie" told members of the Television Critics Assocation in August. "I think we're dealing with a mind that is incomprehensible. I certainly am not capable of discerning what was going through his mind or why."

Still, there were signs. While filming "The Birds," Hitchcock made overt moves on the actress. When she rebuffed his advances, he put her through difficult times on the set.

The new HBO film "The Girl" suggests that Hedren was subjected to five days of bird attacks. Later, she was forced to redo difficult scenes and pull back her performance. When she tried to get out of her contract, he refused and, basically, derailed her career.

"He was an extremely sad character," Hedren said. "We are dealing with a brain here that is unusual, genius and evil -- deviant to the point of dangerous because of the effect he can have on people who are totally unsuspecting."

Surprisingly, few knew about the relationship until after the films were released and Hedren was out of his control.

She agreed to talk to director Julian Jarrold and Sienna Miller -- who plays her in the film. Acclaimed British actor Toby Jones portrays Hitchcock.

"When I first heard Toby's voice as Alfred Hitchcock, my body just froze," Hedren said. At a screening, "nobody moved. Nobody said anything until my daughter, Melanie Griffith, jumped up and said, 'Now I have to go back into therapy.'

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Four minutes with Helen Mirren




HELEN Mirren talks about her insecurities, going naked and working with Bruce Willis and Morgan Freeman in the film Red.

1. GAME DAME BATTLES INSECURITY

"It was honestly one of the hardest things I've ever done," says Dame Mirren of her new movie, The Door. "You can't see that, but it was."

Set in post-war, Communist Hungary, she plays a stern maid who reveals her past to her new employer. "I had to strip all my artform, all my technique away - the performance had to be naked. I was very insecure. Is this enough? Is it too much?"

2. THAT'S NOT ALL THAT WAS NAKED!

"I had absolutely no make-up on - which, incidentally, is brilliant," says Mirren, whose killer looks at 66 are well-chronicled. "I literally took five minutes to get ready in the morning. There's a liberation in that: take me as I am." She got back in the make-up chair for Hitchcock, playing wife to Anthony Hopkins as the famed director. "He's so wonderful, it was fantastic."

READ MORE: http://www.news.com.au/news/four-minutes-with-helen-mirren/story-fnejnl1p-1226428423079


Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Anthony Hopkins: He’s one of the busiest actors in Hollywood, but superstar Sir Anthony insists: I’m too lazy to chase roles by Robin Turner, Western MailJul 17 2012 WALES ON LINE



And at the end of this year Welsh film star Sir Anthony Hopkins will be celebrating his 75th birthday.

But that has not stopped in-demand Port Talbot born actor Hopkins claiming he is “too lazy” to go off in pursuit of interesting film roles.

The veteran actor, now based in sun-baked Los Angeles, will next be seen playing legendary filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock in the eagerly awaited biopic Hitchcock, based on the making of the 1960 shock horror flick Psycho.


Alongside him will be fellow Oscar-winner Dame Helen Mirren as the director’s wife Alma Reville and Scarlet Johansson as Psycho’s damsel in distress Janet Leigh.

Jessica Biel will play Vera Miles who was film’s heroine.

On-set photographs of Hopkins looking a dead ringer for Hitchcock seem to suggest he was made for the role.

But in an interview with Total Film Magazine, Hopkins insists though the part was initially offered to him several years ago, he never set out to land the role.

He explained: “It came along about seven or eight years ago with one director attached and then that fell apart.

“Then about a year ago my agent called and said ‘Hitchcock is back’.

“I met the director, Sacha Gervasi, and he seemed to have such unbridled enthusiasm about it that I said: ‘OK, let’s give it a whirl.’

“I guess my saying: ‘Let’s have a go’ gave it the green light.

“But I never pursue anything – I’m too lazy.”



Read More http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2012/07/17/he-s-one-of-the-busiest-actors-in-hollywood-but-superstar-sir-anthony-insists-i-m-too-lazy-to-chase-roles-91466-31408655/

Saturday, June 2, 2012

How eerie! Sir Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren are dead ringers for horror director Alfred Hitchcock and his beloved wife By LINDA MASSARELLA PUBLISHED: 15:36 EST, 1 June 2012 | UPDATED: 07:53 EST, 2 June 2012 MAIL ON LINE



In the first snap shots taken of Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren on the Los Angeles set of Hitchcock yesterday, it's clear the British actors have slipped right into character.

The 74-year-old Silence of the Lambs star was completely transformed into the legendary director with the help of prosthetic makeup. It gave Hopkins the long-nosed and big-jowled profile for  which Alfred Hitchcock was so famous.

Naturally slim, Hopkins was turned into a 300-pound giant with the help of a fat suit and further prosthetic make up around his jaw and neck.

Luckily for Mirren, Alma Hitchcock was naturally slender,

Some red hair dye, jewels and a period mink coat and long white gloves were all the 66-year-old actress needed to add to play the part.

Production on Sacha Gervasi's Hitchcock has been underway for about five weeks at various locations around Hollywood.

The movie looks at the period of Hitchcock's life when he was making one of the most iconic films of all time, Psycho.


Read more:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2153451/Sir-Anthony-Hopkins-Helen-Mirren-dead-ringers-horror-director-Alfred-Hitchcock-beloved-wife-Alma.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Helen Mirren: Helen Mirren bares her belly as she takes a break on the set of Hitchcock PUBLISHED: 17:10 EST, 12 May 2012 | UPDATED: 02:15 EST, 13 May 2012 (MAIL ON LINE)



At 66 years old it’s not often you see her showing any flesh below the bust and above her hemline.
But Helen Mirren flashed a little more than expected while on the set of her new film yesterday.

The legendary actress – who is starring as Alma Reville in the upcoming movie Hitchcock – revealed her midriff as she hurried around in Pasadena, California in between scenes.


Wearing a black and white skirt which fell below the knee with white slippers and a ginger wig for her role, the star looked relaxed as she sipped on a hot beverage in a paper cup.


However Mirren appeared to get too comfortable as she let a few buttons loose in the sunshine, causing her stomach to show.


Helen would have no problem accidentally displaying her tummy in a second outfit she wore.


The film also features Scarlett Johansson as Psycho star Janet Leigh whose character Marion Crane famously met a sticky end in the shower scene.




Read more:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2143577/Helen-Mirren-bares-belly-takes-break-set-Hitchcock.html?ito=feeds-newsxml




Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Anthony Hopkins, Scarlett Johansson, Ralph Macchio, Helen Mirren Set for Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho By Andy Propst • Apr 17, 2012 • Los Angeles (THEATER MANIA)


Alfred Hitchcock (left) and Anthony Hopkins as the famed director


As previously reported, Academy Award winner Anthony Hopkins will play Hitchcock and Oscar winner Helen Mirren will play the filmmaker's wife, Alma Reville. Tony Award winner Scarlett Johansson and Jessica Biel will play Janet Leigh and Vera Miles, respectively, two of the actresses who starred in Psycho. Macchio will portray the classic film's screenwriter, Joe Stefano.


READ MORE:  http://www.theatermania.com/los-angeles-theater/news/04-2012/anthony-hopkins-scarlett-johansson-ralph-macchio-h_54934.html


Thursday, March 22, 2012

Helen Mirren, Anthony Hopkins: Jessica Biel Joins 'Hitchcock' Film (CHRISTIAN POST)



The "Hitchcock" cast will also include actress Scarlett Johansson, who will portray "Psycho" actress Leigh.

The film chronicles the legendary director Hitchcock and his horror classic in which Leigh is viciously murdered in the famous shower scene. "Psycho" was based on the nonfiction book of the same name by Stephen Rebello.



Biel and Johansson will be joined by cast members Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren, who will play Hitchcock and his wife. The upcoming film will follow the director's struggles to make "Psycho" in the 1960s, which is considered one of the most influential films of all time.

British actor James D'Arcy was also cast in "Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho" as Anthony Perkins, according to Variety.


READ MORE:  http://global.christianpost.com/news/jessica-biel-joins-hitchcock-film-71896/



Friday, March 2, 2012

Anthony Hopkins, Scarlett Johansson, Helen Mirren Set for Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho


Tony Award winner Scarlett Johannson will play actress Janet Leigh alongside Oscar winners Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren in the film Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho, according to The Hollywood Reporter.



The film, to be written by John McLaughlin and directed by Sacha Gervasi, is based on the non-fiction book by Stephen Rebello that tracks how Hitchcock decided to make the now-classic film.

Hopkins will play Hitchcock and Mirren will play the filmmaker's wife, Alma Reville. By Brian Scott Lipton • Mar 2, 2012 • Los Angeles


Read more:  http://www.theatermania.com/los-angeles/news/03-2012/anthony-hopkins-scarlett-johansson-helen-mirren-se_51611.html


Friday, January 27, 2012

the "Alternative Honors List," or, for me, the I'll take it if they don't want it list (New York Times)


The writer Doris Lessing and David Bowie both turned down honors from the British government.



In what the BBC is calling the “alternative honors list,” the British government on Friday released the names of 277 people — actors, writers, musicians, politicians, scientists and others — who for reasons known mostly to themselves rejected the rarefied opportunity to become knights, dames and the like between 1951 and 1999.       

Included are Roald Dahl, who did not want to receive the Order of the British Empire, or O.B.E., in 1986; Graham Greene, who did not want to be a Commander of the British Empire, or C.B.E., in 1956; and Aldous Huxley, who turned down a knighthood in 1959.

The list, released only after repeated Freedom of Information requests by the BBC, includes only dead nonrecipients and leaves it anyone’s guess as to why they declined their awards. But people who turned down awards in the past have given their reasons as, variously, not believing in the monarchy; not liking the system’s links to the British Empire, when there is no British Empire anymore; being miffed that the honor they are being offered is one of the lower-level ones; and feeling generally opposed to the elitism of the whole thing.       


To read more:  http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/27/world/europe/britain-releases-partial-list-of-those-declining-knighthood.html?_r=1

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

BAFTA Fellowship: Few Women, Few Outside UK/Hollywood, Steven Spielberg Before Ingmar Bergman, Federico Fellini, Billy Wilder (ALT Film Guide)

| Jan 4, 2012 |






Alfred Hitchcock, Psycho
Alfred Hitchcock, Psycho set

The first recipient of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts' Fellowship, "awarded in recognition of outstanding achievement in the art forms of the moving image," was director Alfred Hitchcock in 1971. Dozens of film, television, and assorted media personalities have become BAFTA Fellows since then, though the pattern here — as most elsewhere — is that achievements by men are deemed much more important than those by women. [Full list of BAFTA Fellowship recipients.]

The only woman to become a BAFTA Fellow in the Fellowship's first 25 years was television producer Grace Wyndham Goldie, a pioneer of Current Affairs programs on the BBC. Since then, that quite short list has gone on to include actresses Vanessa Redgrave, Julie Christie, Maggie Smith, Elizabeth Taylor, and Judi Dench; actress and sometime director Jeanne Moreau; editor Anne V. Coates; and actresses/writers Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders (whose latest Absolutely Fabulous episodes can be found online).

Also of lesser importance to the British Academy are achievements by those outside either the United Kingdom or Hollywood. Exceptions to this particular rule — all but one from Continental Europe — include the aforementioned actress/director Jeanne Moreau, French oceanographer/documentary filmmaker Jacques Cousteau, Japanese Nintendo video game designer Shigeru Miyamoto, and the following filmmakers: Andrzej Wajda (Poland), Federico Fellini (Italy), Ingmar Bergman (Sweden), and Abel Gance and Louis Malle (France).

Also of note is that comedians Eric Morecambe and Ernie Wise (1999) and Stanley Kubrick (2000) received their Fellowship after they were already dead. Steven Spielberg, on the other hand, got his Fellowship in 1986 — after being in the business for less than two decades. Spielberg, in fact, became a BAFTA Fellow before the likes of Federico Fellini, Ingmar Bergman, Alec Guinness, and Billy Wilder — who began his film career in the late 1920s.

It's also worth pointing out that in order for someone to be named a Fellow for his/her film achievements, it helps to either have a movie out or one about to come out. In 1986, Steven Spielberg had The Color Purple, his first "real" drama (i.e., not featuring sharks, high-speed chases, or outer-space creatures); 1978 Fellow Fred Zinnemann had Julia; 1982 Fellow Andrzej Wajda had Man of Iron (and the Solidarity Movement going on); 1989 Fellow Alec Guinness had Little Dorritt; 2001 Fellow Albert Finney had Erin Brockovich; and 2012 Fellow Martin Scorsese has Hugo. Even Alfred Hitchcock had Frenzy coming out in 1972, the year after he became a Fellow


http://www.altfg.com/blog/movie/bafta-fellowship-alfred-hitchcock-steven-spielberg-alec-guinness/

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

(Yahook TV - UK and Ireland) 2012 TV Preview



An early New Year highlight will be the second series of ‘Sherlock’ (New Year’s Day, 8.10pm, BBC1). Three stand-alone feature-length films lie in wait for the brilliantly eccentric Benedict Cumberbatch and the stolid, long-suffering Martin Freeman. Both are perfectly cast in their roles as Sherlock and Watson, and the three stories – ‘A Scandal In Belgravia’, ‘The Hounds Of Baskerville’ and ‘The Reichenbach Fall’ – get the year’s TV off to flyer.

Later in 2012, Cumberbatch stars in ‘Parade’s End’, a story about the lives and loves of the aristocracy around the time of World War I. He plays a conservative landowner who is having an illicit relationship with Rebecca Hall’s spirited suffragette; while Adelaide Clemens is his beautiful, vicious, socialite wife. Adapted from Ford Madox Ford's novels by Sir Tom Stoppard, and with a quality supporting cast on board, this looks like it could be top class.

Talking of the antics of the historical elite, ‘Downton Abbey’ will return in September. In the meantime, its creator Julian Fellowes has turned his prolific pen to the enduringly fascinating story of the ‘Titanic’ in a four-part drama coming to ITV1 this Spring. Linus Roache, Celia Imrie and Toby Jones star. Fellowes promises that the action will focus not on the first-class passengers, or the poor devils in steerage, but the (as he claims) “previously untold” stories of the second class passengers. Sadly, despite our repeated letters, he has refused to include the Downton cast in the yarn; we believe that Miracle Recovery Matthew could have saved the day with some amphibious wheelchair heroics.

Staying with the historical, men of a certain age upon whom the shower scene in ‘American Werewolf In London’ left a profound and lasting effect will be delighted to know that the peerlessly lovely Jenny Agutter will be back on screens in 2012. She heads the cast of ‘Call The Midwife’ (Miranda Hart is also involved) in a period drama about, well, midwives in 1950s East London. It looks a bit like a classier version of ‘The Royal’ (if such a thing is possible).

From the same era, newsroom drama ‘The Hour’ returns for a second series, and we’re excited that Peter Capaldi is joining the cast. The series will move on to 1957 and focus on the Cold War; presumably there will not be any Malcolm Tucker-like swearing.

Talking of journalism, we’ll be keeping our eye out for ‘Hacks’, starring Claire Foy as a tabloid editor on Channel 4 early in the year. Written by ‘Drop The Dead Donkey’ creator Guy Jenkin, it sounds like a dark black comedy about the lengths newspapers will go to in their search for the story.

One woman with an opinion on that is Sienna Miller, who takes time off from sticking it to the media to star in an interesting-sounding drama about Alfred Hitchcock (played by Toby Jones). La Miller plays Tippi Hedren, who was the star of ‘The Birds’, and the object of Hitch’s obsession. ‘The Girl’ is a feature-length film and will be on BBC2.


If there’s anything that TV producers like more than a detective, it’s a “reimagining” of a beloved character as a youngster. Inspector Morse is the latest to get the treatment in ‘Endeavour’ (January 2nd, 9pm, ITV1). Steven Evans plays the grumpy young sleuth in 1965, already fond of crosswords and his car, investigating the case of a missing schoolgirl that takes him to Oxford. This is a feature-length film, plans are afoot for a series.

BBC2 is also getting in on the crime act with ‘Line Of Duty’ (featuring Vicky McClure and Lenny James), a heavy-sounding exploration of a fatal shooting by police and the ensuing cover-up. Topical comparison’s to 2011’s Mark Duggan case are already being made.

Given the economic times, it’s perhaps no surprise that dramas about winning the lottery are up front in writers’ minds. The great Timothy Spall stars in ‘The Syndicate’ for BBC1, a drama about a group of supermarket workers in Leeds whose lives are changed by six little numbers, and the fallout from their windfall. The presence of Spall, and the fact that it is written by Kay Mellor (‘Band Of Gold’, ‘Fat Friends’) pretty much guarantees that this five-parter will be warm, human and bittersweet.

We don’t know too much about Australian import ‘Winners And Losers’, which is coming to ITV2, other than to say that it’s about four unpopular girls whose lives are turned upside down by a lottery win.

One of the most intriguing ideas on the horizon is ‘Eternal Law’, which comes to ITV1 in January and imagines two angels sent to earth… to work in a law firm and influence humanity for good. Ashley Pharoah and Matthew Graham, writers of ‘Life On Mars’, are the men behind the frankly implausible idea of lawyers being anything other than devils, but we’re looking forward to seeing how this works out.

January will also see Sky 1 dip their toes in big-budget drama with the lavish ‘Treasure Island’. A mighty cast including Eddie Izzard, Elijah Wood, Philip Glenister and Donald Sutherland tackle Robert Louis Stevenson’s great pirate yarn, and jolly good fun it is too.


In the world of comedy, we’re excited about rumours that ‘Mid-morning Matters With Alan Partridge’ might be coming to BBC2, although details are as yet unclear. Jack Whitehall is set for a BBC3 comedy about a useless teacher in ‘Bad Education’, while the delightfully quirky Zooey Deschanel comes to Channel4 in a sitcom about a girl who finds her boyfriend is cheating on her. She moves in with three blokes, and laughs ensue in ‘The New Girl’, which is on the channel in January.

Warwick Davis of ‘Life’s Too Short’ has been doing a pilot of a comedy panel game called ‘Ace Of Clubs’, and Sharon Horgan (‘Pulling’) stars in a fun-sounding BBC3 production about a woman wrongly imprisoned for murdering her boss. It’s called ‘Life Story’.

However, none of these sound like they might be as (unintentionally) funny as the surely dire reboot of ‘Dallas’ that is coming to Channel 5. And finally, great news for fans of campery: there’s a shake-up in the ‘Dancing On Ice’ panel as Gardiner and Bunton get the chop in favour of skating legend Katarina Witt… and Louie Spence!

Monday, October 17, 2011

Five great Jack the Ripper Films

Johnny Depp in 'From Hell'

The notorious serial killer Jack the Ripper brought a reign of carnage to the Whitechapel neighborhood of London in the late 1880s, terrifying the city and capturing the attention of people all over the globe. BBC America’s new crime drama, Whitechapel — premiering Wednesday, October 26th at 10/9c — Detective Joseph Chandler (Rupert Penry-Jones) investigates what appear to be modern-day copycat crimes inspired by those century-old murders.
In lieu of the crimes being solved, Hollywood has repeatedly sought to tell the tale of the Ripper, with fictionalized accounts going back as early as the silent era. Here are four films (and one TV miniseries) that took on the sordid story:

The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog
Of course Alfred Hitchcock did a Jack the Ripper movie. (The British filmmaker and the story of the Ripper go together like foie gras and apple compote.) This 1927 silent thriller, the first adaptation of Marie Belloc Lowndes‘s novel, starred Welsh actor Ivor Novello as the titular lodger wrongly suspected of committing Ripper-like murders. It was Hitchcock’s first commercial success.


A Study in Terror
This 1965 film put Sherlock Holmes (John Neville) and Dr. Watson (Donald Houston) on the tail of Jack the Ripper. And in this one, our crack crime solvers actually determine the identity of the killer.


The Ruling Class
Not a Ripper film per se, but a very dark comedy (from 1972) starring the sublime Peter O’Toole as a mentally disturbed earl who believes he is Jack the Ripper. Here’s Mr. O’Toole putting on an acting clinic, and, at around 3:43, letting out a primal scream that will absolutely liquefy your bowels:


Jack the Ripper
This Golden Globe-winning 1988 miniseries starred Michael Caine as Detective Abberline, the real-life investigator into the Ripper murders. The trailer, which is truly camptastic in a great way, features Caine doing his best Michael Caine, Jane Seymour purring flirtatiously, and a creepy Armand Assante scowling like a young Peter Lorre.



From Hell
Based on Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell‘s graphic novel about the Ripper case, this 2001 film starred Johnny Depp as the opium-addicted Detective Abberline and took the Hughes brothers off the streets of South Central (where they directed their 1993 hit Menace II Society) to the equally alarming “ghettos” of late 19th century London. Roger Ebert wrote, in his three-star review, “Despite its murders, it’s not a slasher film. What it is, I think, is a Guignol about a cross-section of a thoroughly rotten society, corrupted from the top down. The Ripper murders cut through layers of social class designed to insulate the sinners from the results of their sins.”



What is your favorite Jack the Ripper movie?