The winner of the third annual Audience Award at the Glasgow Film Festival has been announced as Alankrita Shrivastava’s Lipstick Under My Burkha. Shrivastava was presented with the award by Doctor Who and Broadchurch star David Tennant at the Glasgow Film Theatre before the festival’s Closing Gala, the World Premiere of Mad To Be Normal.
Shrivastava and the film gained international attention this week following the decision by India’s Censor Board of Film Certification (Cbfc) to deny its theatrical release, citing the ‘lady-orientated’ subject matter and ‘sexual scenes and abusive words’.
Lipstick Under My Burkha tells the stories of four Indian women seeking more from life than docile domesticity. Young mother Shirin feels she must hide her professional success from her husband. Ambitious beautician Leela takes the lead with her Muslim boyfriend even as her family arranges her marriage to a nice Hindi boy. College girl Rehana...
Shrivastava and the film gained international attention this week following the decision by India’s Censor Board of Film Certification (Cbfc) to deny its theatrical release, citing the ‘lady-orientated’ subject matter and ‘sexual scenes and abusive words’.
Lipstick Under My Burkha tells the stories of four Indian women seeking more from life than docile domesticity. Young mother Shirin feels she must hide her professional success from her husband. Ambitious beautician Leela takes the lead with her Muslim boyfriend even as her family arranges her marriage to a nice Hindi boy. College girl Rehana...
- 2/28/2017
- by Press Releases
- Bollyspice
Rachels McAdams and Weisz have agreed terms to join Disobedience, an adaptation of Naomi Alderman’s debut novel of the same name.
Confirmation of that two-fold casting hails from Variety and Screen International, revealing that it is Rachel Weisz who is also in line to produce the button-pressing drama following her stint on Radiator. Chilean filmmaker Sebastian Lelio is primed to make his English-language debut with the movie, working from a script he co-wrote alongside Rebecca Lenkiewicz.
For the uninitiated, Alderman’s book centers on Ronit, the estranged daughter of a rabbi who returns home from New York City to the Orthodox Jewish neighbourhood she grew up in London to attend her father’s funeral. It proves to be a testing trip across the pond, however, after her arrival causes upheaval among the relatively quiet community. Little is known about how Weisz and McAdams will fit into that provocative story...
Confirmation of that two-fold casting hails from Variety and Screen International, revealing that it is Rachel Weisz who is also in line to produce the button-pressing drama following her stint on Radiator. Chilean filmmaker Sebastian Lelio is primed to make his English-language debut with the movie, working from a script he co-wrote alongside Rebecca Lenkiewicz.
For the uninitiated, Alderman’s book centers on Ronit, the estranged daughter of a rabbi who returns home from New York City to the Orthodox Jewish neighbourhood she grew up in London to attend her father’s funeral. It proves to be a testing trip across the pond, however, after her arrival causes upheaval among the relatively quiet community. Little is known about how Weisz and McAdams will fit into that provocative story...
- 10/3/2016
- by Michael Briers
- We Got This Covered
Rachel Weisz, whose latest film “Denial” was just released this Friday, doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon, as per Variety, the actress is set to star and produce the film adaptation of the 2006 novel “Disobedience” written by Naomi Alderman.
The book follows the story of a young woman who returns to her Orthodox Jewish home after the death of her estranged father. Her arrival causes an upheaval in the quaint community after she rekindles a repressed love with her best friend, who also happens to be her cousin’s wife.
Read More: ‘Complete Unknown’ Exclusive Clip: Rachel Weisz and Michael Shannon Pretend To Lead Different Lives In Romantic Identity Drama
The drama will be directed by Sebastián Lelio, who co-wrote the script with Rebecca Lenkiewicz. “Disobedience” also marks the Chilean director’s first English-language film.
Ed Guiney will also produce via his Element Pictures banner, as well...
The book follows the story of a young woman who returns to her Orthodox Jewish home after the death of her estranged father. Her arrival causes an upheaval in the quaint community after she rekindles a repressed love with her best friend, who also happens to be her cousin’s wife.
Read More: ‘Complete Unknown’ Exclusive Clip: Rachel Weisz and Michael Shannon Pretend To Lead Different Lives In Romantic Identity Drama
The drama will be directed by Sebastián Lelio, who co-wrote the script with Rebecca Lenkiewicz. “Disobedience” also marks the Chilean director’s first English-language film.
Ed Guiney will also produce via his Element Pictures banner, as well...
- 10/1/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Exclusive: Film4, HBO, Rialto and Sundance Channel among buyers of comedy-drama executive-produced by Barbara Broccoli and Rachel Weisz.
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has inked home entertainment deals on Tom Browne’s debut comedy-drama Radiator about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Film4 has picked up UK TV rights, while HBO has come on board for Eastern Europe and Krea Icerik has picked up for Turkey to broadcast on their Moviemax Festival Channel. Rialto has jumped in for New Zealand and Sundance Channel has secured rights for Middle East and North Africa.
The film, which debuted at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014 and went on to secure nominations at the London Critics’ Awards and Evening Standard Awards, stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax ) with Daniel Cerqueira () playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring...
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has inked home entertainment deals on Tom Browne’s debut comedy-drama Radiator about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Film4 has picked up UK TV rights, while HBO has come on board for Eastern Europe and Krea Icerik has picked up for Turkey to broadcast on their Moviemax Festival Channel. Rialto has jumped in for New Zealand and Sundance Channel has secured rights for Middle East and North Africa.
The film, which debuted at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014 and went on to secure nominations at the London Critics’ Awards and Evening Standard Awards, stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax ) with Daniel Cerqueira () playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring...
- 4/19/2016
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: Film4, HBO, Rialto among buyers of comedy-drama executive-produced by Barbara Broccoli and Rachel Weisz.
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has inked home entertainment deals on Tom Browne’s debut comedy-drama Radiator about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Film4 has picked up UK TV rights, while HBO has come on board for Eastern Europe and Krea Icerik (Sinema TV) has picked up for Turkey to broadcast on their Moviemax Festival Channel. Rialto has jumped in for New Zealand and Sundance Channel has secured rights for Middle East and North Africa.
The film, which debuted at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014 and went on to secure nominations at the London Critics’ Awards and Evening Standard Awards, stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax ) with Daniel Cerqueira () playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring some order...
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has inked home entertainment deals on Tom Browne’s debut comedy-drama Radiator about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Film4 has picked up UK TV rights, while HBO has come on board for Eastern Europe and Krea Icerik (Sinema TV) has picked up for Turkey to broadcast on their Moviemax Festival Channel. Rialto has jumped in for New Zealand and Sundance Channel has secured rights for Middle East and North Africa.
The film, which debuted at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014 and went on to secure nominations at the London Critics’ Awards and Evening Standard Awards, stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax ) with Daniel Cerqueira () playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring some order...
- 4/19/2016
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
Tom Hardy received three nods for his roles in Legend, The Revenant and Mad Max: Fury Road.Scroll down for full list
Toddy Haynes’ Carol leads this year’s London Critics’ Circle awards with seven nominations, with Andrew Haigh’s 45 Years receiving six.
Tom Hardy has received three acting nominations: best actor for Legend, supporting actor for The Revenant and British actor of the year for his roles in the aforementioned two as well as Mad Max: Fury Road.
Fury Road, along with Steve Jobs and The Revenant, received five nominations.
Brooklyn, Room and Bifa-winner Ex Machina garnered four apiece.
The winners will be revealed at a ceremony on January 17 at London’s May Fair Hotel.
At last year’s awards, Richard Linklater’s Boyhood won both best film and director.
Full list of nominees
Film Of The Year
45 Years
Amy
Carol
Inside Out
The Look of Silence
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Martian
The Revenant
[link...
Toddy Haynes’ Carol leads this year’s London Critics’ Circle awards with seven nominations, with Andrew Haigh’s 45 Years receiving six.
Tom Hardy has received three acting nominations: best actor for Legend, supporting actor for The Revenant and British actor of the year for his roles in the aforementioned two as well as Mad Max: Fury Road.
Fury Road, along with Steve Jobs and The Revenant, received five nominations.
Brooklyn, Room and Bifa-winner Ex Machina garnered four apiece.
The winners will be revealed at a ceremony on January 17 at London’s May Fair Hotel.
At last year’s awards, Richard Linklater’s Boyhood won both best film and director.
Full list of nominees
Film Of The Year
45 Years
Amy
Carol
Inside Out
The Look of Silence
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Martian
The Revenant
[link...
- 12/15/2015
- ScreenDaily
Rachel Weisz is only in La for a whirlwind visit. The fellow Brit is making herself tea in on this windy La day and found time to talk about her latest projects; Youth,...
- 12/1/2015
- by Jazz Tangcay
- AwardsDaily.com
As if young couples don’t have enough pressures on their relationship these days, British filmmakers seem intent on reminding them that it will all end in tears, anyway. “45 Years”, about an elderly couple whose relationship hits an unexpected snag, is currently winning plaudits, with Charlotte Rampling in getting Oscar buzz. Shortly before, another British film dealt with a similar subject, though widening the family net to include a son. “Radiator” is only now receiving a theatrical release in the UK, a year after its 2014 debut at the London Film Festival followed by a handful of festival awards including Special Jury Prize at the Sarasota Film Festival. But better late than never, for this is a lovely, painfully poignant little film, executive-produced by Rachel Weisz. It starts with a telling voicemail, as a woman’s voice meekly reports that “Leonard has got rather stuck on the sofa, and won’t...
- 11/27/2015
- by Demetrios Matheou
- Thompson on Hollywood
Exclusive: UK sales outfit boards Marco Niemeijer’s documentary.
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has boarded rights to Marco Niemeijer’s Holocaust themed documentary, Little Angels.
Produced by Annemiek van der Hell for Windmill Film, the documentary charts the troubled relationship between a 97-year-old Auschwitz survivor and her one remaining daughter born just after the emancipation of the camps.
Premiering at Netherlands Film Festival on Saturday (Sept 26) and nominated for Prix Europe 2015, the film is set for transmission in May 2016 on Joodse Omroep (Jewish Broadcaster) in the Netherlands.
Starline is hoping to pursue a similar release pattern on the film to the one it achieved with Gerry Fox’s documentary Marc Quinn: Making Waves, which earlier this year showed at Picturehouse cinemas, Dochouse and Home Manchester.
Julie Delaney, partner and director of worldwide distribution at Starline, said: “We’re very excited to be enriching our carefully chosen collection of documentaries with Marco Niemeijer’s thoroughly moving...
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has boarded rights to Marco Niemeijer’s Holocaust themed documentary, Little Angels.
Produced by Annemiek van der Hell for Windmill Film, the documentary charts the troubled relationship between a 97-year-old Auschwitz survivor and her one remaining daughter born just after the emancipation of the camps.
Premiering at Netherlands Film Festival on Saturday (Sept 26) and nominated for Prix Europe 2015, the film is set for transmission in May 2016 on Joodse Omroep (Jewish Broadcaster) in the Netherlands.
Starline is hoping to pursue a similar release pattern on the film to the one it achieved with Gerry Fox’s documentary Marc Quinn: Making Waves, which earlier this year showed at Picturehouse cinemas, Dochouse and Home Manchester.
Julie Delaney, partner and director of worldwide distribution at Starline, said: “We’re very excited to be enriching our carefully chosen collection of documentaries with Marco Niemeijer’s thoroughly moving...
- 9/22/2015
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: UK sales outfit nabs drama executive produced by Barbara Broccoli and Rachel Weisz.
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has picked up world rights to Tom Browne’s debut feature, Radiator, about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Scooping prizes at film festivals including Dallas, Galway, Glasgow and Nashville after debuting at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014, the film stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax) with Daniel Cerqueira (Ripper Street) playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring some order to their lives.
Genevieve Stevens produces for Rattling Stick along with Turnchapel Films. Executive producers are James Bond producer Barbara Broccoli, Mel Agace and Rachel Weisz are executive producers.
Piers Nightingale, partner and director of acquisitions at Starline, said: “Striking the perfect temperature between sharply observed humour and tender humanity, Radiator has been...
UK sales outfit Starline Entertainment has picked up world rights to Tom Browne’s debut feature, Radiator, about an eccentric couple struggling to cope with the challenges of old age.
Scooping prizes at film festivals including Dallas, Galway, Glasgow and Nashville after debuting at the BFI London Film Festival in 2014, the film stars the late Richard Johnson (The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas) and Gemma Jones (Last Tango In Halifax) with Daniel Cerqueira (Ripper Street) playing their middle aged son who turns up to try and bring some order to their lives.
Genevieve Stevens produces for Rattling Stick along with Turnchapel Films. Executive producers are James Bond producer Barbara Broccoli, Mel Agace and Rachel Weisz are executive producers.
Piers Nightingale, partner and director of acquisitions at Starline, said: “Striking the perfect temperature between sharply observed humour and tender humanity, Radiator has been...
- 9/15/2015
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
Rams wins Special Jury Prize and Audience Award, The Treasure picks up Best Romanian Film at 14th Transilvania International Film Festival in Cluj
Juan Schnitman’s The Fire has won the top prize at the 14th Transilvania International Film Festival (May 29-July 7).
The Argentinian relationship drama, which received its world premiere at this year’s Berlinale, won the Transilvania Trophy and a €15,000 cash prize at the Cluj-Napoca event.
The Special Jury Prize, worth €1,500, and the audience award for one of the 12 first or second films by their directors in the international competition, went to Grímur Hákonarson’s Rams.
The Icelandic film won Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section last month.
The most popular film overall at the festival was Operation Arctic by Grethe Bøe-Waal from Norway, one of the countries in Focus at this year’s Tiff, along with Argentina.
Bulgarian-Greek hit The Lesson, which has already won a string of awards at Sofia, Thessaloniki, Gothenburg...
Juan Schnitman’s The Fire has won the top prize at the 14th Transilvania International Film Festival (May 29-July 7).
The Argentinian relationship drama, which received its world premiere at this year’s Berlinale, won the Transilvania Trophy and a €15,000 cash prize at the Cluj-Napoca event.
The Special Jury Prize, worth €1,500, and the audience award for one of the 12 first or second films by their directors in the international competition, went to Grímur Hákonarson’s Rams.
The Icelandic film won Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section last month.
The most popular film overall at the festival was Operation Arctic by Grethe Bøe-Waal from Norway, one of the countries in Focus at this year’s Tiff, along with Argentina.
Bulgarian-Greek hit The Lesson, which has already won a string of awards at Sofia, Thessaloniki, Gothenburg...
- 6/8/2015
- by vladan.petkovic@gmail.com (Vladan Petkovic)
- ScreenDaily
Richard Johnson with Gemma Jones and Tom Brown at Glasgow Film Festival. Photo: Eoin Carey Richard Johnson has died at the age of 87, his family announced today.
He died at the Royal Marsden Hospital in Chelsea after a short illness.
The London-born actor - who was a founding member of the Royal Shakespeare Company - had a career spanning 60 years on stage, television and film.
Most recently, he starred in Radiator which won the inaugural Audience Award at Glasgow Film Festival. He attended the festival to discuss it. Other film roles included Khartoum - alongside Charlton Heston and Laurence Olivier - and The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas.
Glasgow Film Festival co-director Allan Hunter said: “I think we all realised how lucky were to have Richard as a guest at this year’s Glasgow Film Festival. He was unfailingly gracious and charming, deservedly proud of his work in Radiator but...
He died at the Royal Marsden Hospital in Chelsea after a short illness.
The London-born actor - who was a founding member of the Royal Shakespeare Company - had a career spanning 60 years on stage, television and film.
Most recently, he starred in Radiator which won the inaugural Audience Award at Glasgow Film Festival. He attended the festival to discuss it. Other film roles included Khartoum - alongside Charlton Heston and Laurence Olivier - and The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas.
Glasgow Film Festival co-director Allan Hunter said: “I think we all realised how lucky were to have Richard as a guest at this year’s Glasgow Film Festival. He was unfailingly gracious and charming, deservedly proud of his work in Radiator but...
- 6/6/2015
- by Amber Wilkinson
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Read More: Sarasota Film Festival Announces New Programmers The 2015 Sarasota Film Festival announced the winners of this year's jury and audience award prizes on Saturday at the Sarasota Opera House. This year's notable winners were Kornél Mundruczó's "White God," which took home the Narrative Feature Jury prize, while Eliza Kubarska's "Walking Under Water" won the Documentary Feature Jury prize. The Independent Visions Award went to Ross Partridge's "Lamb." Khalik Allah won the Terry Porter Visionary Award for "Field Niggas," while Maya Vitkova won this year's Tangerine Juice Award. The full list of winners and the jurors for each category are below. Narrative Feature Competition Winner"White God"Director – Kornél Mundruczó Narrative Feature CompetitionSpecial Jury Prize for Excellence in Acting"Radiator"Actor – Gemma JonesDirector – Tom Browne Narrative Feature CompetitionSpecial...
- 4/20/2015
- by Travis Clark
- Indiewire
Tom Browne’s feature debut wins first Audience Award; 40,000 admissions for second year in a row.
Radiator has won the inaugural Audience Award at the Glasgow Film Festival (Gff), which wrapped its 11th edition last night with the UK premiere of Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure.
Tom Browne’s feature debut Radiator stars Richard Johnson and Gemma Jones as elderly hoarders whose middle-aged son arrives from London to take control.
Browne, Johnson and Jones were among the guests who attended this year’s festival.
Browne commented: “Radiator has an unfashionable theme and was made on a tiny budget. Unsurprisingly it is taking a while for the film to find a place within the film industry so to receive this award is very significant for Radiator’s future.”
Speaking at the closing gala, Gff co-director Allan Hunter noted that “the audience have spoken and we trust that British distributors will listen”.
Over 1,100 votes were cast for the Audience...
Radiator has won the inaugural Audience Award at the Glasgow Film Festival (Gff), which wrapped its 11th edition last night with the UK premiere of Ruben Östlund’s Force Majeure.
Tom Browne’s feature debut Radiator stars Richard Johnson and Gemma Jones as elderly hoarders whose middle-aged son arrives from London to take control.
Browne, Johnson and Jones were among the guests who attended this year’s festival.
Browne commented: “Radiator has an unfashionable theme and was made on a tiny budget. Unsurprisingly it is taking a while for the film to find a place within the film industry so to receive this award is very significant for Radiator’s future.”
Speaking at the closing gala, Gff co-director Allan Hunter noted that “the audience have spoken and we trust that British distributors will listen”.
Over 1,100 votes were cast for the Audience...
- 3/2/2015
- by ian.sandwell@screendaily.com (Ian Sandwell)
- ScreenDaily
The Radiator Team Photo: Eoin Carey
It's 11 years old, but the Glasgow Film Festival has just given out its first Audience Award. Chosen by some of the 40,000 film fans who packed the city's screens during the 12 day celebration of cinema, it was won by British independent film Radiator and presented at tonight's closing ceremony, before a gala screening of Force Majeure.
"Receiving the Audience Award has made us all terrifically happy," said writer/director Tom Browne. "Radiator has an unfashionable theme and was made on a tiny budget. Unsurprisingly it is taking a while for the film to find a place within the film industry so to receive this award is very significant for Radiator's future. Richard [Johnson], Gemma [Jones] and I had a great time in Glasgow - we were treated so kindly and were touched by the engagement of the audiences."
"We’ve always known that our audience has the best taste.
It's 11 years old, but the Glasgow Film Festival has just given out its first Audience Award. Chosen by some of the 40,000 film fans who packed the city's screens during the 12 day celebration of cinema, it was won by British independent film Radiator and presented at tonight's closing ceremony, before a gala screening of Force Majeure.
"Receiving the Audience Award has made us all terrifically happy," said writer/director Tom Browne. "Radiator has an unfashionable theme and was made on a tiny budget. Unsurprisingly it is taking a while for the film to find a place within the film industry so to receive this award is very significant for Radiator's future. Richard [Johnson], Gemma [Jones] and I had a great time in Glasgow - we were treated so kindly and were touched by the engagement of the audiences."
"We’ve always known that our audience has the best taste.
- 3/1/2015
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Hot projects new to Screenbase include Nicolas Winding Refn feature The Neon Demon, Pope Francis biopic Francisco, Brady Corbet’s directorial debut The Childhood Of A Leader and a new adaptation by Wim Wenders.Nicolas Winding Refn’s The Neon Demon
Elle Fanning, Keanu Reeves, Christina Hendricks, Abbey Lee, Bella Heathcote and Jena Malone have signed on to co-star in Nicolas Winding Refn’s next feature.
“After making Drive and falling madly in love with the electricity of Los Angeles, I knew I had to return to tell the story of The Neon Demon,” Winding Refn said.
Principal photography will begin in Los Angeles on March 30. Gaumont and Wild Bunch are co-selling the title.
Wim Wenders’ Les Beaux Jours D’Aranjuez
This adaptation of the play by Peter Handke was announced by Alfama’s Paulo Branco during the Efm. It will star Reda Kateb and Sophie Semin. Wenders is expected to shoot in June.
Brady Corbet’s [link...
Elle Fanning, Keanu Reeves, Christina Hendricks, Abbey Lee, Bella Heathcote and Jena Malone have signed on to co-star in Nicolas Winding Refn’s next feature.
“After making Drive and falling madly in love with the electricity of Los Angeles, I knew I had to return to tell the story of The Neon Demon,” Winding Refn said.
Principal photography will begin in Los Angeles on March 30. Gaumont and Wild Bunch are co-selling the title.
Wim Wenders’ Les Beaux Jours D’Aranjuez
This adaptation of the play by Peter Handke was announced by Alfama’s Paulo Branco during the Efm. It will star Reda Kateb and Sophie Semin. Wenders is expected to shoot in June.
Brady Corbet’s [link...
- 2/18/2015
- by maud.le-rest@sciencespo-toulouse.net (Maud Le Rest)
- ScreenDaily
Gemma Jones, Daniel Wolfe and Peter Mullan among guests to attend upcoming 11th Glasgow Film Festival.
Glasgow Film Festival (Gff) has announced the next wave of guests set to attend its upcoming 11th edition, taking place Feb 18-March 1.
Veteran actors Gemma Jones and Richard Johnson will attend in support of Tom Browne’s debut Radiator which is nominated for the inaugural Audience Award, while Catch Me Daddy director Daniel Wolfe and the film’s stars Conor McCarron and Gary Lewis will also be in Glasgow.
Peter Mullan and Morvern Christie are both set to take part in masterclasses on editing and casting as part of the Behind the Scenes programme strand at this year’s festival.
The festival’s FrightFest guests include director April Mullen and writer Tom Doiron for 88, director Hans Herbot for The Treatment, director Russell Gomm for The Woods Movie and director Matt Winn for The Hoarder.
Other guests...
Glasgow Film Festival (Gff) has announced the next wave of guests set to attend its upcoming 11th edition, taking place Feb 18-March 1.
Veteran actors Gemma Jones and Richard Johnson will attend in support of Tom Browne’s debut Radiator which is nominated for the inaugural Audience Award, while Catch Me Daddy director Daniel Wolfe and the film’s stars Conor McCarron and Gary Lewis will also be in Glasgow.
Peter Mullan and Morvern Christie are both set to take part in masterclasses on editing and casting as part of the Behind the Scenes programme strand at this year’s festival.
The festival’s FrightFest guests include director April Mullen and writer Tom Doiron for 88, director Hans Herbot for The Treatment, director Russell Gomm for The Woods Movie and director Matt Winn for The Hoarder.
Other guests...
- 2/6/2015
- by ian.sandwell@screendaily.com (Ian Sandwell)
- ScreenDaily
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.