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Running Time: 90 minutes Release Date: Genre: Comedy drama Language: English Rating: 14A (14A) Chaos reigns when members of a dysfunctional family gather to bury a loved one. Son Daniel (Matthew MacFadyen) anticipates a face-off with his famous brother Robert (Rupert Graves), while cousin Martha (Daisy Donovan) and her fiance Simon (Alan Tudyk) are desperate to make a good impression on her father. In the midst of the family turmoil, a mystery guest (Peter Dinklage) threatens to bring the deceased's skeleton out of the closet. |
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- Notes provided by MGM. - DEATH AT A FUNERAL THE STORY A dignified send-off for a loved one erupts into uproarious chaos when romance, jealousy, in-laws, hallucinogens, dark secrets, life-long yearnings and a spot of bold blackmail all collide in the irreverent British comedy DEATH AT A FUNERAL. Directed by Frank Oz (Bowfinger, In & Out) and featuring a cast made up of the cream of Britain's crop, the film mischievously explores what happens on the day when a typically divided family is finally forced to come to terms with each other's - bad behavior, outrageous faults, skeletons in the closet and all. DEATH AT A FUNERAL is directed by Frank Oz and written by Dean Craig. The producers are Sidney Kimmel, Laurence Malkin, Diana Phillips and Share Stallings. The executive producers are Philip Elway, Andreas Grosch, William Horberg and Bruce Toll. Josh Kesselman, Alex Lewis and Bruce Webb are co-producers. MEET THE FAMILY Daniel (Matthew Macfadyen): Son of the deceased. Still living in his parent's house with his wife, he's an aspiring writer who has been writing the same book for several years, largely out of fear that he'll fail and forever live under the shadow of his supposedly brilliant brother. Swears he's about to make big changes . . . if he can just get through the day of the funeral. Robert (Rupert Graves): Daniel's brother. A renowned yet notably narcissistic writer who "prefers not to get close to people," he's just flown in from New York, where he leads a rich-and-famous lifestyle well beyond his means. Peter (Peter Dinklage): The mystery guest. This unexpected American harbors a secret that will turn the entire proceedings upside down. Martha (Daisy Donovan): Daniel and Robert's first cousin. She's utterly in love with her fiancé, Simon, but her hopes that he'll be able to impress her snobby father are dramatically dashed when Simon has a mishap that turns him into a raving, naked madman. Simon (Alan Tudyk): Martha's fiancé. An uptight, hardworking, sensible young lawyer who is suddenly none of those things when he accidentally ingests a designer drug just before the funeral. Troy (Kris Marshall): Martha's brother. This clever, cool chemistry student with a talent for creating potent hallucinogens becomes the catalyst for Simon's unexpected "trip." Howard (Andy Nyman): Daniel's friend. A nervous hypochondriac, Howard is ruminating over a rash, or possible "pigment mutation," he fears could spell his own demise. Justin (Ewen Bremner) : Howard's friend, who has come to the funeral entirely in the hopes of winning over Martha, with whom he had what for her was a one-night mistake and for him has become an obsession. Jane (Keeley Hawes): Daniel's wife. Practical, down to earth, loving and supportive of her husband, but knows what she wants -- to be out of her mother-in-law's house for good. Sandra (Jane Asher) -- Daniel and Robert's mother. Wife of the deceased, she is at a loss over what to do now, but in the meanwhile, she's rather enjoying her moment in the spotlight. Victor (Peter Egan): Sandra's brother and Martha's father. A wealthy doctor, he considers himself above most people, especially Martha's boyfriends. Uncle Alfie (Peter Vaughan). The elder statesmen of the family, he's cantankerous, impatient, lacks all social graces and he is convinced something strange is going on at the funeral. ABOUT THE PRODUCTION "Who is that naked man on the roof?" A runaway hit at the Aspen Comedy Film Festival, and winner of the festival's coveted Cinemax Audience Award, DEATH AT A FUNERAL pushes the British comedy into edgy modern territory -- transforming the taboo into the side-splittingly screwball. This sharp, snappy, ultimately uplifting tale about the outrageous perils and unexpected pleasures of family affairs is perhaps fittingly directed by an English-born American: Frank Oz. * * * "Tea can do many things dear but it can't bring back the dead." Like the classic screwball comedies, DEATH AT A FUNERAL mixes and matches all manner of characters who are at odds with one another. At odds with nearly everyone he encounters is the obstreperous Uncle Alfie, who manages to become completely wound up in the day's most outrageous developments. To play this delightfully dismal character, the filmmakers chose the renowned English actor Peter Vaughn, whose many memorable roles have included Anthony Hopkins' father in The Remains of the Day. "We're just thrown here together in a world filled with chaos and confusion . . . with death always lingering around the corner . . . and we do our best." DEATH AT A FUNERAL was shot in seven weeks in and around London and at perhaps the most inspirational location possible for a modern British comedy: the Ealing Studios, where the beloved "Ealing Comedies"- deliciously dark yet exuberantly witty romps such as Kind Hearts and Coronets, The Ladykillers, The Lavender Hill Mob, Passport to Pimlico and The Man in the White Suit -- were born in the 40s and 50s and seduced audiences worldwide. As a fully contemporary descendent of these films, DEATH AT A FUNERAL couldn't have found a warmer or more warranted home base. "We were so thrilled to be at Ealing where all those classic comedies came to life," says Share Stallings. "It was the perfect atmosphere." # # # # # Jane Asher (Sandra) Born in London, Jane Asher's acting career has spanned stage and screen, with a debut in 1952 at the tender age of five in the film Mandy. She made her West End stage debut in 1960 and went on to join the Bristol Old Vic and the National Theatre. Highlights in Asher's feature film career include Lewis Gilbert's Alfie opposite Michael Caine, Peter Sasdy's Henry VIII and His Six Wives, Charles Sturridge's Runners, Jerzy Skolimowki's Success is the Best Revenge, Gavin Millar's Dreamchild and David Hare's Paris By Night. Major TV drama credits include, The Mill on the Floss, Brideshead Revisited, East Lynne, The Mistress, Wish Me Luck, Murder Most Horrid, The Choir, Miss Marple, New Tricks and A For Andromeda. Asher's many theatrical roles have included Michael Apted's Strawberry Fields at the National Theatre, Michael Lindsay-Hogg's Whose Life is it Anyway, Alan Ayckbourn's Henceforward at the Vaudeville, as well as Robert Kidd's production of The Philanthropist which transferred from the Royal Court to Broadway, Look Back in Anger at the Royal Court and Criterion, as well as the Bristol Old Vic and US tour of Tyrone Guthrie's Romeo & Juliet, Measure for Measure, Great Expectations, The Happiest Days of Your Life and Sixty Thousand Nights. Ewen Bremner (Justin) Born in Edinburgh, Scotland and with over twenty five feature film credits to his name, it was Mike Leigh's acclaimed Naked that marked a turning point in Ewen Bremner's early acting career. This quickly led to roles in Danny Cannon's Judge Dredd, Prince of Jutland, Ruffian Hearts and The Phoenix and The Magic Carpet. 1996 saw Bremner take on the role that resulted in one of his most memorable and celebrated performances as Spud in Danny Boyles' hugely successful Trainspotting. Other major credits have included, The Acid House, Life of Stuff, Mojo, Julien Donkey-Boy, Paranoid, Guy Ritchie's Snatch, Pearl Harbor, Ridley Scott's Black Hawk Down, The Reckoning, Skagerrak, Welcome to the Jungle, Around the World in Eighty Days and more recently, Woody Allen's Match Point, Alien Vs. Predator, Sixteen Years of Alcohol and Marvelous. Bremner's stage work includes Kathy Burke's Donmar Warehouse production of God of Hell, Trainspotting at the Bush Theatre and the Traverse/Citizen's Theatre, Gormenghast at the Lyric Hammersmith, The Present and Bright Light Shining at the Bush, Slab Boys, Greenfingers, The Funeral and Conquest of the South Pole at The Royal Court Theatre. With his supporting role in Tom Decillo's Living In Oblivion, actor Peter Dinklage - as dwarf actor `Tito' -- delivered an open rant to an entire generation of would-be filmmakers, refusing to be used as a gag or a prop -- while honoring his craft with an unforgettable fierceness and dignity. Dinklage later went on to redefine the concept of a leading man with his starring role in the 2003 Sundance Audience Award winner The Station Agent. For his work in The Station Agent, Dinklage was recognized with a "Best Actor" nomination in the 2003 Independent Spirit Awards, as well as being named one of the top 5 "Breakout Stars" of the year by Entertainment Weekly. Also in 2003, Dinklage received critical raves for his appearance in the Will Ferrell box office hit Elf, where he played scene-stealing children's author Miles Finch. Recently, Dinklage starred in Sidney Lumet's Find Me Guilty starring opposite Vin Diesel, Lassie opposite Peter O'Toole, Samantha Morton and Kelly Macdonald, Michael Showalter's The Baxter and Penelope starring Christina Ricci, James McAvoy and Reese Witherspoon. On television, he has been seen in the CBS sci-fi series Threshold and in a recurring role on the popular Nip/Tuck. Dinklage plays Simon Barsinister in Disney's forthcoming live-action version of Underdog and has joined the cast of 3/5 a Man, about Nat Turner and the 1831 Slave Rebellion. He is set to star in a number of upcoming features, including Mendel's Dwarf for Barbara Streisand's Barwood and the Affair of the Sorcerers franchise. Other feature credits include Michel Gondry's Human Nature written by Charlie Kaufman; John Hamburg's Safe Men; Eric Shaeffer's Never Again; Alexandre Rockwells' 13 Moons and Greg Pritikin's Surviving Eden. Dinklage is a graduate of the drama program at Bennington College in Vermont. He has appeared Off-Broadway in such plays as Marc Spitz's I Wanna Be Adored, Brandon Cole's Imperfect Love, and Jonathan Marc Sherman's Evolution. In 2005, Dinklage was nominated for a Drama League Distinguished Performance Award for his portrayal of Richard III at New York's Public Theater and he starred in the Charlie Kaufman New Ear radio play Hope Leaves the Theater opposite Meryl Streep and Hope Davis. Daisy Donovan (Martha) Trained at LAMDA (the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts), Daisy Donovan first came to prominence on British television in the popular cult TV programme The 11o'Clock Show. She then went on to front two series of her own British TV show, Daisy Daisy, which she has recently transferred to the United States. Donovan's feature film credits include Danny Boyle's Millions and Unexpected Mrs Pollyfax. Her TV drama credits include My Family, Poirot: Death on the Nile, director Metin Huseyin's Angel's Hell and Pillow Talk. Peter Egan (Victor) Peter Egan is a veteran of British stage and screen and his versatile talents have won him roles in such diverse and celebrated television dramas as Lillie Langtry in which he played Oscar Wilde, The Prince Regent in which he took the title role, Reilly Ace of Spies, The Dark Side of the Sun, A Woman of Substance, The Perfect Spy in the role of John Le Carre, four series of the hugely popular series Ever Decreasing Circles, Paradise Postponed, Macgyver, The Chief, A Touch of Frost, The Ambassador, Cry Wolf, Inspector Lynley, My Family and more recently, Jericho, Whatever Love Means and Home Again. Feature film credits include Chariots of Fire, The Hireling for which he received the BAFTA Best Actor Award, Bean, The I Inside, The Wedding Date and Man to Man. Egan's extensive stage roles have included Trevor Nunn's Hamlet, Journey's End at London's Cambridge Theatre for which he received the Best Actor accolade at the London Theatre Critics' Awards, Arms and the Man, You Never Can Tell which received a Royal Gala Opening at the Lyric Hammersmith, M Butterfly at the Shaftesbury Theatre, Déjà Vu at the Comedy Theatre, Art at the Wyndham's, Noises Off and The Secret Rapture. As a theatre director, Egan's work includes Uncle Vanya for the Renaissance Theatre Company, A Midsummer Night's Dream at Mills College, San Francisco, as well as productions at the Lyric Hammersmith and London's Savoy Theatre. Rupert Graves (Robert) Born in Somerset, England, Rupert Graves is a versatile and acclaimed acting talent, with a host of film, TV and theatre credits to his name. Recipient of the Best Actor accolade at the 1996 Montreal World Film Festival for his performance in Intimate Relations, he was also nominated for an Olivier Award in 1997 for his stage role in Hurlyburly. Graves' big screen debut came with James Ivory's A Room With A View and this was quickly followed byIvory's Maurice. Graves then went on to appear in Charles Sturridge's A Handful of Dust and Where Angels Fear to Tread. Other feature film highlights include, Nick Hytner's The Madness of King George, Louis Malle's Damage, Different for Girls which received the Best Film award at the 1996 Montreal World Film Festival, Revenger's Comedies and more recently, Extreme Ops, Rag Tale and Funny Farm for Mary McGuckian and V For Vendetta. Major TV drama roles have included, Fortunes of War, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall for director Mike Barker, Robert Bierman's Blonde Bombshell, Nick Hurran's Take a Girl Like You, Franc Roddam's Cleopatra, the lavish Forsyte Saga for Granada TV, Joe Wright's Charles II and the BAFTA award-winning series Spooks. Celebrated stage performances include Patrick Marber's Broadway production of Closer and The Caretaker at London's Comedy Theatre, `Tis Pity She's A Whore at the National Theatre; Design for Living at the Gielgud Theatre and the Broadway production of The Elephant Man for director Sean Mathias, as well as Howard Davies' Iceman Cometh at the Almeida. Keeley Hawes (Jane) A popular face on both the big and small screen, British actress Keeley Hawes is perhaps best known for her role as Zoe in the BAFTA award-winning BBC drama series Spooks (MI5 in the United States). She also took on the role of Kitty Butler in the controversial BBC production, Tipping the Velvet for which she was widely acclaimed. Other notable television credits include, Marple: The Murder is Announced, Sex & Lives, The Murdoch Mysteries, A Knights Tale, Othello, Wives and Daughters, Our Mutual Friend and Karaoke. Most recently Keeley took the female lead in The Best Man alongside Richard Coyle and Toby Stephens and prior to that, she appeared in Michael Winterbottom's comedy feature A Cock and Bull Story opposite Steve Coogan; Under the Green Wood Tree and Macbeth as part of BBC1's Shakespeare series alongside James McAvoy. Notable feature film credits include, The Avengers, with Ralph Fiennes, Sean Connery and Uma Thurman, Complicity and The Last September. Keeley was recently seen as the female lead in After Thomas, a television drama based on the true story of one couple's struggle to meet the challenges of their child's autism. Matthew Macfadyen (Daniel) Matthew Macfadyen is currently filming Incendiary, adapted from the novel of the same name by Chris Cleave. A contemporary drama about the emotional aftermath of a suicide bombing in London, the film, from the producers of `Girl With a Pearl Earring' also stars Michelle Williams and Ewan McGregor. Next, Matthew will start work on the feature film Frost/Nixon, based on the award-winning play written by Peter Morgan, which appeared at the Donmar Warehouse (London), London's West End and on Broadway. This version, directed by Ron Howard, sees Matthew playing the role of John Birt, the producer of Frost's TV show. The film retells the story of the post-Watergate television interviews between British talk show host David Frost and former president Richard Nixon. Later this year Matthew will star in the black comedy Death at a Funeral, directed by Frank Oz and co-starring Rupert Graves, Ewen Bremner and Keeley Hawes. Also this year, Matthew will return to the stage in The Pain And The Itch at the Royal Court Theatre in June. Directed by Dominic Cooke, Matthew will play a wealthy stay-at-home father who hosts a Thanksgiving dinner for friends, but it all goes wrong when his daughter becomes ill and a Muslim friend drops dead. On television, Matthew has just been seen in the Channel 4 drama, Secret Life in which he plays a convicted paedophile newly released from prison and the drama has received outstanding reviews. In September 2005, Matthew won critical acclaim for the lead role of Mr Darcy in the Oscar nominated adaptation of Pride and Prejudice directed by Joe Wright. The Working Title film starred Keira Knightley, Brenda Blethyn and Donald Sutherland. Also in this year, Matthew was nominated as Best Actor for his role in In My Father's Den at the British Independent Film Awards. Directed by Brad McGann, Matthew played the lead of Paul, a disillusioned war journalist. The film follows Paul, whose return home is wrecked when he becomes implicated in the mysterious disappearance of a teenage girl he has befriended. Matthew's other film credits include: Middletown, directed by Brian Kirk, starring Daniel May and Eva Birthistle, released early this year, The Reckoning with Tom Hardy, Enigma directed by Michael Apted and also starring Kate Winslet and Tom Hollander, and Maybe Baby directed by Ben Elton. He is well known for his television appearance in the second series of Spooks as Tom, starring alongside David Oyelowo. He also starred in the role of Paul Tibbenham in The Project, directed by Peter Kosminsky and Sir Felix Cadbury in The Way We Live Now directed by David Yates. Other television credits include: Perfect Strangers, Bloodline (BBC), Warriors (BBC) and Wuthering Heights (LWT). As well as television and film, Matthew has appeared on stage in challenging roles such as Henry IV Parts 1 & 2 (National Theatre) Battle Royal (National Theatre/RSC/Stratford), School for Scandal (Barbican/Cheek by Jowl), Much Ado About Nothing (West End), Duchess of Malfi (West End/New York) and Midsummer Nights Dream (RSC). Kris Marshall (Troy) A rising star on both the big and small screen, Kris Marshall received the Best Newcomer accolade in 2002 at the British Comedy Awards for his role in the popular TV comedy series My Family. Major feature film credits include Richard Curtis' Love Actually, Mike Radford's The Merchant of Venice, Richard Eyre's Iris, Shekhar Kapur's Four Feathers, as well as the winner of the 2000 London Film Festival Short Film competition, Je T'Aime John Wayne. Marshall has also featured in Mexicano, Deathwatch, The Most Fertile Man in Ireland, Dead Babies, 5 Seconds to Spare, Closing Numbers, Make Believe and Rumblewood. A popular face on British television, notable roles include Granada TV's lavish production of Dr Zhivago, Murder City, Funland, Metropolis, Waiting for the Whistle, Trial and Retribution II, Lively Lads and Stick With Me Kid. Stage roles have included The Revenger's Tragedy, The Hypochondriac for director Lindsay Posner at the Almeida, Richard Eyre's Invention of Love, Happy Savages, The Unexpected Guest, Journey's End, Death Trap, The Winslow Boy, Sleuth and A Midsummer Night's Dream. Andy Nyman (Howard) Andy is fast becoming one of the most sought after film actors the UK. Since his breakout performance as Keith Whitehead in the controversial cult movie Dead Babies, he has been in high demand for film roles around the world. His versatility has meant his career and roles are always remarkably diverse. He has played lead roles in Jon Avnet's Emmy award winning Uprising (NBC) as a polish freedom fighter and in Coney Island Baby as a gay French gun dealer. He has six films due for release over the next 18 months: Chris Smith's cult British movie Severance (co-starring Danny Dyer); Rian Johnson's (Brick) eagerly anticipated new movie Brothers Bloom (starring Adrien Brody and Mark Ruffalo); improvised gangster thriller Played (starring opposite Val Kilmer and Gabrielle Byrne); London based romcom Are You Ready For Love (co-starring Lucy Punch); and a bio-pic of 70's Dutch Rock Group Herman Brood entitled Wild Romance. Andy has also won the Best Actor award at the 2006 Cherbourg Film Festival in France for his performance in Shut Up and Shoot Me; the film was also awarded both the Audience award and Best Film award. The black comedy is due for release next year. Something of a renaissance man Andy is also a world-renowned magician and the co-creator and co-writer of the hugely popular Derren Brown television show. He has just been nominated for a BAFTA for writing Derren Brown: The Heist. He and Derren wrote Russian Roulette, Séance, Messiah as well as three series of the hugely popular Trick of the Mind series, he also co-wrote and directed both Derren's stage shows, both of which have toured and played the West-End to great reviews & packed houses. Derren and Andy were awarded the 2006 Olivier Award for Best Entertainment. Derren Brown's latest theatre show, 'An Evening of Wonders' is also co-written and directed by Andy and is currently enjoying a sell-out tour before coming into the West End. Alan Tudyk (Simon) Alan Tudyk is a Texas native, born in El Paso and raised in Plano. In 1993 he moved to New York to attend Juilliard and upon leaving began his career in the theatre with Bunny Bunny, for which he received the Clarence Derwent award for best New York theatre debut, and a Theatre World award for best actor. Alan has since appeared in several off-Broadway and Broadway plays. He could most recently be seen in The Roundabout Theatre's critically acclaimed 2007 revival of Prelude to a Kiss on Broadway. In 2005 Alan appeared in Monte Python's Spamalot. Alan has appeared in many television shows and made-for-television movie events, but having written all of the above, he is tired of writing about Alan and would like to conclude with the list of special skills listed from a 1992 found resume: Stage combat, juggling, horseback riding, skate boarding, carpentry, and weird faces and voices. Peter Vaughan (Uncle Alfie) A veteran of film and TV with over thirty-five major feature films to his credit and fifty TV dramas, Peter Vaughan is one of Britain's most recognizable character actors, who has worked with some of the industry's most acclaimed directorial talents, including Terry Gilliam, Charles Sturridge, Nick Hytner, Antonia Bird, James Ivory, Nic Roeg, Ken Russell, Bob Rafelson, Karel Reisz and Bille August. He made his major feature film debut in 1970 with Sam Peckinpah's Straw Dogs and went on to take roles in classic movies such as The French Lieutenant's Woman, The Time Bandits, Zulu Dawn, The Missionary, Brazil, Haunted Honeymoon, Mountains of the Moon, Heart of Darkness, Remains of the Day, Fatherland, The Crucible, Face, An Ideal Husband, Hotel Splendide, Longitude, The Tenth Kingdom. More recently he has appeared in Roger Michell's The Mother, The Life and Death of Peter Sellers and Colin Nutley's The Queen of Sheba's Pearls. Notable TV credits include Porridge, Winston Churchill: The Wilderness Years, Shelley, Cats Eyes, Sins, Chancer, Game Set and Match, Our Friends in the North, Lorna Doone, Hornblower, The Jury, Malice Aforethought, Murder Most Horrid and Our Mutual Friend. Vaughan's stage career has included productions of The Cherry Orchard at the Royal Exchange, Travelling North at the Lyric Hammersmith, the National tour of Hobson's Choice and An Inspector Calls and The Overgrown Path at the Royal Court.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS Frank Oz (Director) Frank Oz is the director of The Muppets Take Manhattan, Little Shop of Horrors, What About Bob?, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, House Sitter, Indian in the Cupboard, In & Out, Bowfinger, The Score and Stepford Wives. SIDNEY KIMMEL (Producer) Veteran producer Sidney Kimmel is chairman and CEO of Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, the Los Angeles and New York-based production, finance, and distribution company. Active in the motion picture industry for more than 20 years, Mr. Kimmel is responsible for such pictures as Michael Hoffman's The Emperor's Club; Stanley Donen's Blame It on Rio; and Adrian Lyne's 9 ½ Weeks. His passion as an independent producer eventually led to the founding of Sidney Kimmel Entertainment in October 2004. Producing up to ten features per year, the company works with esteemed filmmaking talent to create quality commercial films. Share Stallings (Producer) After producing Death at a Funeral, Share Stallings moved on into producing Curious George 2 for Universal. She is also a Producer on Tied to a Chair (with Mario Van Peebles), and was the Producer of The Reality Trap (with Tovah Feldshuh). She was a Development Producer at Disney Toons and an Associate Producer of Brain Smasher...A Love Story (with Teri Hatcher). Before producing, Stallings was Vice President, Nickelodeon Movies, and acted as the Production Executive on Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius and The Wild Thornberrys Movie. Previously, she served as Head of Development for Animated DVDs and Pre-School TV Series at DreamWorks SKG and was the Executive in Charge of Production for Joseph, King of Dreams (prequel to The Prince of Egypt). Prior to this, she was Vice President, Frank Oz Productions, working on Indian in the Cupboard and In & Out. Stallings was also Vice President of Production for Kings Road Entertainment, where she worked on Knights (with Kris Kristofferson), There Goes The Neighborhood (with Jeff Daniels), and the Kick Boxer series. Stallings has been an Associate Professor at California State University, Northridge and is a member of From the Heart, The Process Studio Theatre Company and ASCAP (as a lyricist). Laurence Malkin (Producer) With ongoing projects in Hollywood and Europe, Laurence Malkin most recently directed and produced the psychological thriller Five Fingers, starring Laurence Fishburne, Ryan Phillippe, and Colm Meany. The film received its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival 2006 and Lionsgate will release it in North America. Death at a Funeral, which won the Audience Award at this year's U.S. Comedy Since graduating from USC Film School, Malkin has co-written, directed, and produced over two hundred commercials and music videos. His commercial for Photobuys Magazine was honored by the AICP and added to the permanent film collection at New York's Museum of Modern Art. With his writing partner, Chad Thumann, Malkin has also scripted various projects for the U.S. film studios. Malkin began his creative life in the theater, creating performance art pieces and directing productions of Zoo Story, Betrayal and Waiting For Godot. Along with his writing partner, Malkin co-created The Musicosm, an episodic website about the music industry, which used character-based portals as narrative interfaces. He also received awards for his short films and visual poems, including a CINE Eagle Award, a bronze medal at the Houston Film Festival, and a nomination for Best Drama at the Electronic Cinema Festival in Tokyo for Dark Horizon. Diana Phillips (Producer) Diana Phillips is an American producer who now resides in London. Most recently, she produced Paramount's Alfie starring Jude Law and Marisa Tomei, directed by Charles Shyer. Prior to that, Phillips produced Miramax/Filmfour's Birthday Girl written and directed by Jez Butterworth and starring Nicole Kidman and Ben Chaplin; and MTV's first feature film, Joe Apartment for David Geffen. For many years, Phillips collaborated with Abel Ferrara on such films as King of New York starring Christopher Walken and Dangerous Games with Madonna and Harvey Keitel, as well as producing Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant. Phillips also produced Blue in the Face and Smoke (Miramax) for Wayne Wang and Darnell Martin's I Like It Like That for Columbia Pictures. Between 1996 and 1999, she was Executive in Charge of Production for Jim Henson's Creature Shop. Phillips is currently producing Wild Child, a Working Title picture directed by Nick Moore, starring Emma Roberts. Dean Craig (Screenwriter) English screenwriter Dean Craig has been writing professionally for four years. Death at a Funeral is Craig's first major feature. When production ended in July 2006, he was hired to write Down and Dirty Pictures, an adaptation of the acclaimed expose of the independent film industry written by Peter Biskind, author of "Easy Riders, Raging Bulls." He is currently writing the feature films A$$hole, for Paula Weinstein (Blood Diamond) and Warner Brothers, and Affected Provincials Companion to be produced by Jonny Depp and Graham King (The Departed) and directed by the Russo Brothers. He also wrote Caffeine which starred Mena Suvari, Katherine Heigl, Breckin Meyer and Mike Vogel. Craig has written & directed three short films, and is scripting his directorial feature debut, Lovesick. Oliver Curtis, BSC (Cinematographer) Oliver Curtis received a first class honours degree in Photography and Film from the London College of Printing as well as a Diploma in Film Studies from the University of London. In 1992 he attended a Cinematography Masterclass in the US with the legendary Jack Cardiff BSC, Robbie Greenberg ASC and Peter James ACS, ASC. Curtis has taught Film and Video Production to students at the Watershed Media Centre in Bristol and was awarded the BSC in 1998. A sought-after talent in the world of cinematography, he has combined his work on feature films with television dramas, documentaries and a host of commercials. Among his most notable feature film credits are The Wedding Date, Owning Mahowny starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, the award-winning Love and Death on Long Island, Saltwater, The Wisdom of Crocodiles, The Final Curtain and Madagascar Skin. He received a BAFTA nomination for Best Photography and Lighting for Marc Munden's television adaptation of Vanity Fair in 1999 and also went on to light Uncle Adolf and Bait for director Nick Renton. Other notable TV drama credits include Our Boy, Bodyguards, More is Less, Prayer for a Crash, The Accidental Conspiracy, Invisible City and Flames of Passion for which he was Highly Commended in the Cinematography category at the Chicago Film Festival in 1990. He has worked on over forty major commercials for major companies such as Guinness, Wella, Halifax, Max Factor, Rimmel, Ghost, Nivea, Head and Shoulders, Pantene, Carphone Warehouse, Oil of Olay, Sony Ericsson, Honda and Pizza Hut. His documentary credits include Rough Guide to the World, The Late Show, Horizon, Shopping and The Net for BBC2 and Passengers for Rapido TV/C4. Curtis has also directed Trotsky's Home Movies for C4's Rear Window series, After the Attack as part of the Affairs of the Heart series, Pontecorvo and Foundations of Nightmare. Michael Howells (Production Designer) A highly experienced talent not only in major feature films, but also in the fields of theatre, opera, ballet, documentaries, fashion, exhibitions and art installations, Michael Howells was also been BAFTA and RTS nominated in the production design category for Charles Sturridge's Shackleton. He was nominated for a Golden Satellite for Oliver Parker's An Ideal Husband and BIFA-nominated in the Best Technical Achievement category for Stephen Fry's Bright Young Things. Other major feature film highlights in his long and distinguished career include, Emma, Fairytale A True Story, Princess Caraboo, Talk of Angels, Everafter, Mike Figgis' Miss Julie and About Time Too and more recently, Kirk Jones' Nanny McPhee and Paul Weiland's Sixty Six. Natalie Ward (Costume Designer) An accomplished talent in the world of feature film costume design, Natalie Ward's most recent credits include, Roger Michell's Venus starring Peter O'Toole and Vanessa Redgrave; Anthony Minghella's Breaking and Entering with Jude Law and Juliette Binoche; and Derailed starring Jennifer Aniston and Clive Owen. A regular collaborator with directors Roger Michell and Micheal Winterbottom, Ward designed the costumes for Michell's Enduring Love and The Mother; and Winterbottom's Code 46 with Tim Robbins and Samantha Morton, Wonderland and 24 Hour Party People. Other notable credits include Bridget Jones' Diary, The Beach for Danny Boyle, Intimacy and Damien O'Donnell's Heartlands. Earlier in her career, Ward assisted on such films as Shekhar Kapur's Elizabeth, Winterbottom's I Want You and Dad Savage. |
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