A British film crew attempts to boost morale during World War II by making a propaganda film after the Blitzkrieg.
Her latest is a WWII - set comedy titled Their Finest about
a British film crew that attempts to boost morale by making a propaganda film after the Blitzkrieg.
Not exact matches
We'd made a quintessentially European
British film: based on a Hungarian novel, shot in Hungary with a pan-European cast and
crew, with editing, VFX and sound done between Berlin, Stockholm, Warsaw and London.
Hosted by Christopher Husted (he of the Bernard Herrmann Estate), the analytical featurette covers the agreement set between
British and American studios that guaranteed a set sum of theatrical revenue be allotted towards the production of
British - made
films with local
crews and cast.
Unlike the fluid mix of
crew and actors - namely American headliners Richard Widmark and Gene Tierney, plus a fine supporting
British cast - the
film's music soundtracks and longer / additional scenes in the
British version reflect their target cultures.
Following his Oscar - winning score last year for Gravity, acclaimed
British film and television composer Steven Price scores Fury, director David Ayer's gritty WWII epic starring Brad Pitt as a battle - hardened sergeant who commands a Sherman tank and its five - man
crew...
Now a proper, married
British lady, Travers claims to fear her book will receive «cartoon treatment,» but her demands regarding the
film's casting, sets, songs, costuming, and of course its script, drive Walt and his production
crew to distraction.
The
crew of semi-anonymous
British TV veterans behind the Crackle series Snatch have stumbled into the kind of job that gets pawned off on patsies and chumps: turn the Guy Ritchie movie of the same title into a crime series with the approximate production value of a Guy Ritchie - influenced student
film.
In September 2009 the cast and
crew of the
British television show Top Gear were seen
filming along the road.
Harcourt recently hosted
British reggae legends UB40 and the Virgin Holidays
film crew at Carlisle Bay when they were in Antigua making a new music video for their top ten hit «Come Back Darling» to encourage tourists to «come back» to the Caribbean following a concerted recovery effort after the impact of Hurricane Irma.
I arrived at the usually sedate National Portrait Gallery to be confronted by a throng of eager reporters, photographers and
film crews from as far afield as Japan, testament to the popularity of one of the greatest
British artists, the late Lucian Freud.