English film director
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This week's episode is the first half of the MK3D show recorded live at the BFI Southbank in February 2023.Mark welcomes actress Sheila Atim to talk about her action-packed film, THE WOMAN KING. Sheila discusses performing her own stunts, and displaying her spear in the living room as a warning to others…Mark is also joined by Carol Morley to talk about her heartfelt film about Audrey Amiss, TYPIST ARTIST PIRATE KING. Carol explains the meaning behind the title and talks about the vast amount of research she did into the Audrey for the film.THE WOMAN KING is available to rent on Prime Video and TYPIST ARTIST PIRATE KING is available to watch on Netflix.Thank you for listening!———————The opening title sequence of Kermode on Film uses quotes from:- Mary Poppins, directed by Robert Stevenson and distributed by Walt Disney Motion Pictures – quote featuring Julie Andrews.- Nope, written, directed and produced by Jordan Peele, and distributed by Universal Studios – quote featuring Keke Palmer.- Withnail & I, written and directed by Bruce Robinson, and distributed by HandMade Films – quote featuring Richard E Grant.- The Exorcist, written by William Peter Blatty and directed by William Friedkin, distributed by Warner Brothers – quote featuring Ellen Burstyn and Linda Blair.We love these films. We urge you to seek them out, and watch them, again and again.They are masterpieces!Cover photo by Julie Edwards.Kermode on Film is an HLA Agency production.This episode was edited by Alex Archbold Jones.© HLA AgencyHosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.#MarkKermode #KermodeOnFilm #MK3D #BFI #BFISouthbank #SheliaAtim #TheWomanKing #Hunger #CarolMorley #TypistArtistPirateKing Films, TV Series, Plays, and Books mentioned in this episode include:Blue VelvetEraserheadDune (1984)Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with MeElephant ManMulholland DriveThe Straight StoryThe Woman KingHunger (2008)Constellations Taste of SaltThe Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas AdamsThe Wages of FearSorcerer Solaris (2002)Breathless (1983)À Bout de SouffleThe Falling Out of BlueTypist Artist Pirate KingDreams of a LifeSweetieThe RebelWhitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with SomebodyMoonage DaydreamCast and Crew mentioned in the episode include:David LynchGina Prince-Bythewood Michael FassbenderLiam CunninghamNick PayneRaven JacksonSteve McQueenSteven SoderberghRichard GereMonica DolanClio BarnardJonathon GlazerAudrey Amiss Jane CampionTony HancockRay GaltonAlan SimpsonIrene HandlNaomi AckieBrett Morgen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Uma pessoa com família e amigos morreu em casa e ninguém percebeu... por três anos. O caso de Joyce Vincent no Reino Unido chama a atenção, mas é mais chocante que esse fato é recorrente e tenha palavra própria no Japão: kodokushi. Assim como há um nome para pessoas que abandonam a sociedade para morar em seus quartos. Quais as causas, histórias e riscos da solidão? Este é mais um episódio do Escuta Essa, podcast semanal em que Denis e Danilo trocam histórias de cair o queixo e de explodir os miolos. Todas as quartas-feiras, no seu agregador de podcasts favorito, é a vez de um contar um causo para o outro. Não deixe de enviar os episódios do Escuta Essa para aquela pessoa com quem você também gosta de compartilhar histórias e aproveite para mandar seus comentários e perguntas no Spotify, nas redes sociais @escutaessapod, ou no e-mail escutaessa@aded.studio. A gente sempre lê mensagens no final de cada episódio! ... NESTE EPISÓDIO -O docu-filme sobre Joyce Vincent se chama “Dreams of a Life”, da diretora Carol Morley. -A agência de notícias Kyodo informou que de Janeiro a Março deste ano 21.716 pessoas morreram sozinhas em casa no Japão. A expectativa é que 68 mil pessoas tenham um kodokushi em 2024. -O paper “Governing through kodokushi”, de Nils Dahl, fala sobre como as mortes solitárias cresceram no Japão e sua relação com questões culturais e sociais como isolamento social, pobreza e exclusão. -A BBC já escreveu sobre os hikikomori . A matéria citada no podcast é uma longa reportagem de Maggie Jones em 2006 para o The New York Times. -A fotógrafa Maika Elan fez uma série de fotos sobre os hikikomori e suas vidas reclusas em seus quartos. -Em 2023 a BBC contou a história de Shoji Morimoto, o homem que “é pago para fazer nada”. Ele tem um livro de memórias chamado “mental person who does nothing”, sem tradução em português, lançado em 2003. -Robert Putnam escreveu o artigo “Bowling Alone” em 1998. Em 2000 ele deu origem ao livro “O colapso e o renascimento da comunidade americana”. Putnam foi o entrevistado da última semana do The Interview, do The New York Times. -“Clube da Luta” é um livro de 1996 escrito por Chuck Palahniu. Ele virou um filme de grande sucesso em 1999 dirigido por David Fincher. -O documentário "A Perna Cabeluda", sobre a lenda urbana do Recife, está disponível no YouTube. ... AD&D STUDIO A AD&D produz podcasts e vídeos que divertem e respeitam sua inteligência! Acompanhe todos os episódios em aded.studio para não perder nenhuma novidade.
Ian reviews Carol Morley's Typist Artist Pirate King. A portriat of the British artist Audrey Amiss as she travels from London to Sunderland. A road trip through England touchig on creativity, mental health and relationships. Typist Artist Pirate King (2023). Written and Directed by Carol Morley. Starring Monica Dolan, Kelly Macdonald and Gina McKee
Film director Carol Morley and comedian Will Hislop discuss their favourite books.
Carol Morley is known for films like The Falling, Dreams Of A Life, and her most recent work, Typist Artist Pirate King. Her next movie is an adaptation of her autobiographical novel Seven Miles Out. It's about a teenage girl coming to terms with her father's suicide, and not one word of the book has made its way into the screenplay. Carol tells Stephen Hughes why she was surprised by how difficult it was to adapt her own work, and how it brought back thoughts and feelings she thought she'd learned to live with. Carol also reveals that selling a script is harder than writing one, as she waits patiently to hear back from film companies that she'd sent the screenplay to. Produced and presented by Stephen Hughes **This programme contains distressing content** During this interview, Carol speaks frankly about the effect of her father's suicide upon her. If you need support following anything you've hear in this episode, there's information at bbc.com/actionline and help is also available at befrienders.org.
This week, certified film royalty is in the studio! Mark and Simon sit down with Martin Scorsese's legendary film editor, Thelma Schoonmaker, who is here to discuss restoring her late husband director Michael Powell's equally legendary body of work as part of the iconic filmmaking duo Powell and Pressburger. She also talks about her own work with Scorsese. A must listen! Mark reviews the restoration of the Powell and Pressburger classic ‘Peeping Tom', a psychological horror about a filmmaker who murders women and records their dying moments; ‘Typist Artist Pirate King', director Carol Morley's warm and sympathetic fictionalised portrait of the late “avant-garde and misunderstood” artist Audrey Amiss; ‘Cat Person', a darkly comic psychological thriller about a college student who goes on an awkward date with an older man who may be a murderer, based on Kristen Roupenian's viral New Yorker short story of the same name; and ‘Five Nights at Freddy's, a supernatural horror inspired by the indie video game of the same name, which sees a troubled security guard menaced by creepy, animatronic, funhouse animals. Plus, the duo takes us through the Box Office Top 10 and the film events worth catching in this week's What's On. Time Codes (relevant only for the Vanguard - who are ad-free!): 10:38 Typist Artist Pirate King Review 22:27 Box Office Top Ten 35:45 Thelma Schoonmaker Interview 53:32 Laughter Lift 58:06 Cat Person Review 01:04:56 Five Nights At Freddy's Review 01:10:17 What's On You can contact the show by emailing correspondence@kermodeandmayo.com or you can find us on social media, @KermodeandMayo EXCLUSIVE NordVPN Deal ➼ https://nordvpn.com/take Try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee! A Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music Entertainment at sonymusic.com/podcasts and follow us @sonypodcasts To advertise on this show contact: podcastadsales@sonymusic.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The writer and academic Emma Dabiri encourages unruliness in her latest book, Disobedient Bodies. She puts the origins of western beauty ideals under the spotlight and explores ways to rebel against and subvert the current orthodoxy. The book is accompanied by an exhibition, The Cult of Beauty, at the Wellcome Collection from 26 October 2023 to 28 April 2024. It was in the Wellcome's archive that the filmmaker Carol Morley came across the works and writings of the artist Audrey Amiss. In her new film, Typist Artist Pirate King, Morley creates an imaginative tribute to an unjustly neglected and misunderstood artist. The norm in the world of medical research has been the male body, but in her latest work the scientist and author Cat Bohannon focuses exclusively on women. In Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 million Years of Human Revolution she looks at everything from birth to death. Producer: Katy Hickman
11am-12pm Sports Preview Screenwriters Masterclass with Carol Morley forms part of the Film Fleadh Two of Ireland's Leading Visitor Attractions Come Together to Share Their Common Love of the Connemara Pony ‘Galway Talks with Keith Finnegan' broadcasts every weekday morning from 9am on Galway Bay FM
Are you aware of the crucial importance of comprehensive blood testing for men over 40? Tune into this eye-opening episode with our special guest, Dr. Carol Morley - a renowned naturopathic doctor and author - as we uncover the value of taking a proactive approach to our health journey. Discover how an objective snapshot of our bloodwork can reveal not only nutritional deficiencies but also flag potentially serious conditions and diseases before they worsen.Dr. Morley walks us through the different tests that should be done, the best time to get a blood panel, and how to go about getting the results. Learn about the importance of tests such as lipid profile, fasting glucose, testosterone, PSA, and inflammatory markers. Don't miss this fascinating conversation where we create a personalized health plan based on your bloodwork and discuss the proactive approach that can lead us to a healthier lifestyle.Did you find this episode helpful insightful or motivating? If so, let's connect! You can find me on....InstagramLinked InThe Spear Method Website
With its outrageous audience, pioneering programme, all night film marathons and a particularly vicious house cat, The Scala cinema in London's King's Cross blazed a flamboyant trail across the repertory cinema scene of the 70s, 80s and 90s. As Jane Giles recounts in her book on The Scala, director John Waters describes it as “a country club for criminals and lunatics and people that were high... which is a good way to see movies..." Among that membership were the burgeoning creative filmmakers of the 21st century - Christopher Nolan, Peter Strickland, Joanna Hogg and Ben Wheatley to name a few. Ellen E Jones separates truth from legend with the man who started it all - film producer and director Stephen Woolley. They discuss the infamous screenings, the intersection of music, politics and film, and the ‘collective of lost souls' who came together over a shared love of film. Mark Kermode discusses the age of cinema before video and streaming with film writer and curator Anne Bilson. They remember trekking across London by bus to hunt down one-off screenings, and staying up all night for kung fu specials. Mark then talks to film programmer Andrew Woodyatt about invoking the spirit of The Scala for today's audiences at his weekly Queer Cinema club, the Pink Palace at the Rio Cinema. And in this week's Viewing Note, filmmaker Carol Morley remembers a Scala moment which has haunted her dreams ever since. Producer: Freya Hellier A Prospect Street production for BBC Radio 4
In a genius bit of Bank Holiday scheduling, we're delving into the recent past for Jamie's chat with the excellent director Carol Morley. We discuss Carol's career, her new film Typist Artist Pirate King and the role of Jane Campion in getting it off the ground, and Carol's work in spotlighting the great Muriel Box. Apologies for the audio on the intro, we were not in a bin – we were in a meeting room, and we want that on the record. If you like The Cineskinny, tell your pals! Leave us a five-star review! Share the episode on socials! TIMESTAMPS: Jamie on Typist Artist Pirate King (1:00) A mini 'What We're Looking Forward To...' (3:20) Carol Morley on Dreams of a Life (4:30) Morley's new film, Typist Artist Pirate King (7:20) New ways of portraying mental health on screen (12:30) Monica Dolan, ‘one of the greatest actors of our generation' (22:00) Muriel Box, and celebrating female artists (24:40) Jane Campion, legend (27:40) Carol and Muriel radio documentary: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001jcln RETURN TO SEOUL AND MATINEE TICKETS: https://www.theskinny.co.uk/tickets Follow the team on Twitter @ptrsmpsn @anahitrooz @jamiedunnesq @lew_rob_, get us on TikTok @thecineskinny, email us at cineskinny@theskinny.co.uk Music: Too Cool by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4534-too-cool) License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
Carol Morley follows the trail of Britain's most prolific female director, Muriel Box. She directed 13 films in 14 years and was the first woman ever to receive the Oscar for best original screenplay, for The Seventh Veil. Yet, she is barely known in her own country. She has never had a retrospective of her work here and her films are hard to get hold of, even box office hits like The Truth About Women, Simon And Laura and The Passionate Stranger. Carol made an appeal on Radio 4 for anyone who knew Muriel to get in touch. And she was overhwelmed by the response. On this cinematic journey of discovery, Carol talks to her daughter, Leonora, and her grandsons Ben and Charlie, as well as distant relatives Sean Barton and Olivia Howells. She also hears from Karen Peploe, who met the director when she wrote a thesis on her in the 1980s, and British Film Institute curator Jo Botting. Along the way, Carol digs through crates of diaries and letters and finally gets to hold an Academy Award, albeit one that's been loved to death by two small children. Carol also mounts a campaign to have Muriel's achievements recognised in this country, and discovers that her efforts have not been in vain. Presented by Carol Morley. Readings by Monica Dolan and Joanna Munro.
Florence Pugh was Oscar and BAFTA nominated for her role as Amy March in the adaptation of Little Women. She has won huge acclaim for films including Midsommer, Lady Macbeth, and the Marvel adventure Black Widow. She also played the lead in the television adaptation of John Le Carré's The Little Drummer Girl. More recently she's been on the big screen in Don't Worry Darling, and 18th century Irish drama The Wonder. Florence tells John Wilson how her performing ambitions during a primary school nativity show in which she played Mary with a northern accent, borrowed from her Grimsby-born grandparents. She chooses, as one of her most significant creative inspirations, a woman called Linda Mace who made costumes for all the school productions, and whose store room full of period clothes fuelled Florence's imaginations. She recalls her breakthrough role in The Falling, about a fainting phenomenon at an English girls' school in the late 1960s, and how she was inspired by the film's director Carol Morley. She also pays tribute to casting director Shaheen Baig who helped her secure roles in subsequent films including Lady Macbeth, and remembers working alongside Anthony Hopkins and Emma Thompson when she played Cordelia in a television version of King Lear. Florence Pugh chooses the song She's Only Happy In the Sun by the American singer songwriter Ben Harper as source of inspiration, and reflects on her own musical ambitions which started as a teenage singer-songwriter posting videos on YouTube under the name Flossie Rose. She also discusses the pressures of fame, gossip columns and why she's learned to stop searching for references to herself in social media. Producer: Edwina Pitman
My passions English teaching, music and movie reviews and sport
My review of this unusual cop drama out Of Blue from 2019 directed by Carol Morley and starring Patricia Clarkson
It's Monday Cult Babes! And dare I say….things are getting spooky. In this week's episode we're talking about the terrifying reality of well, being forgotten. We start with the story of Joyce Carol Vincent who remains somewhat of a mystery to this day, and then we'll get into two eerily similar situations. Love you bye! Check out my new show OBITCHUARY wherever you're listening! Follow along online: instagram.com/cultliterpodcast Sponsors: Hello Fresh: Hellofresh.com/cultliter14 for up to 14 free meals + free shipping! Blenders Eyewear: Blenderseyewear.com code ‘CULTLITERVIP' for 15% off! BetterHelp: betterhelp.com/spencer for 10% off your first month! Sources: Documentary: ‘Dreams of a Life' -Carol Morley https://www.newspapers.com/image/708855907/?terms=carol%20Joyce%20vincent&match=6 https://www.newspapers.com/image/709233443/?terms=carol%20Joyce%20vincent&match=1 https://allthatsinteresting.com/joyce-vincent https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-WklqxEeXg https://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/body-found-inside-largo-home-identified/2136469/ https://www.tampabay.com/news/publicsafety/cause-of-death-determined-for-largo-woman-not-found-until-three-years-later/2151303/' https://www.jacksonsun.com/story/news/local/tennessee/2014/10/08/twins-died-together/16939269/ See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
With Antonia Quirke Director Carol Morley asked Film Programme listeners if any of them knew Muriel Box, Britain's most prolific female director and arguably most neglected. And she heard from Muriel's daughter, grandson and family friend. Carol tells Antonia why she believes Muriel deserves more recognition for her ground-breaking work. Antonia is on a mission this summer to tell people how much she loves their work, to take the opportunity while she can. This week, she tells Jude Law how much she's always wanted to talk to him about The Talented Mr Ripley and how one scene, in particular, has never left her. Barbara Sukowa has worked with some mercurial directors often known for giving actors a hard time. She tells Antonia why nobody has dared to give her a hard time on set, and about Two Of Us, a powerful drama about two women in their 70s who have been lovers for years, without their families knowing.
Anna talks to two British rising stars about their career prospects and what it feels like to be up for a BAFTA Film Award. CW: This episode includes discussion of sexual assault. First up, Saint Maud star Morfydd Clark tells Anna about working with writer-director Rose Glass on her horror hit. Expressing sympathy for her character Maud, she explains the importance of educating young women with ADHD and autism on consent. Morfydd also recalls her first film job on The Falling and celebrates the safe and artistic environment that writer-director Carol Morley created for girls on set. Keep listening for Morfydd’s funny story on standing up to male directors and her insight into reading scripts with dyslexia. Next, Anna is joined by Rocks lead Bukky Bakray. Plucked out of secondary school by director Sarah Gavron, Bukky explains the X-Factor like casting process for her first professional role. She recalls the joys of meeting open-minded women, works through her ideas of feminism, and pinpoints the importance of intersectionality. Did Rocks almost end up on YouTube? Is Viola Davis a real person? Bukky muses on these topics and more. Other TV and movie mentions: I May Destroy You, Mr Robot, Judas and the Black Messiah, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom, You Don’t Know Me (coming soon). Bukky’s reading recommendations: Gloria Watkins aka bell hooks and Toni Morrison. For more on Saint Maud, find our interview with Rose Glass in Episode 60, and to delve further into Rocks, you can listen to Sarah Gavron in Episode 26. EE Rising Star Details: https://www.bafta.org/film/news/ee-rising-star-award-2021 https://ee.co.uk/why-ee/ee-baftas Become a patron of Girls on Film on Patreon here: www.patreon.com/girlsonfilmpodcast Follow us on socials: www.instagram.com/girlsonfilm_podcast/ www.facebook.com/girlsonfilmpodcast www.twitter.com/GirlsOnFilm_Pod www.twitter.com/annasmithjourno Watch Girls On Film on the BFI’s YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXvkgGofjDzj5mCFL89QKZsN5Tgr3vn7z Girls On Film is an HLA production. Executive producer: Hedda Archbold. Audio Producer: Dan Pugsley. Principal Partner: Peter Brewer. Assistant Producer and Social Media Manager: Heather Dempsey. Assistant Producer: Elliana Jay.
Carol Morley speaks about our need to feel special. She beings with the poem by Jane Hirschfield, "Like Others." (January 16, 2021)
With Antonia Quirke. Ron Howard talks about the challenges of making films about real people, and what it was like to act opposite John Wayne and discovering the secret of his famously laconic acting style. Film-maker Carol Morley makes the case for Muriel Box, Britain's most prolific female director and arguably most neglected. Artist and film-maker Andrew Kotting has to leave his studio after working there for 15 years. In that time, he has amassed a treasure trove of film props, paintings, costumes and memorabilia. It's not just going to be a huge removal job but a trawl through memories of films, friends, family and the departed.
The public perception of a dead woman is challenged in Carol Morley's Dreams of a Life, as Orla Smith writes.
Speaking to familiar faces, including Carol Morley, Jarvis Cocker, Nabihah Iqbal, Noel Fielding and Tim Burgess, the series reflects on how guest have instigated new activities online, open to all, to stay creative in lockdown. Created and hosted by award-winning artists and film makers Iain Forsyth and Jane Pollard (https://auth-somerset.axis12.com/residents/iain-forsyth-jane-pollard) , this series is a joyful listen for anyone who has (re)discovered their creative side in lockdown.
Exploring whether we can really have a collective experience online, our hosts meet with Carol Morley and Tim Burgess. Catch up with the brilliant writer and director Carol Morley, whose films include Dreams of a Life and The Falling. Carol has been hosting “Friday Film Club” – each week she chooses a readily available, free-to-watch film. People then watch at the same time and meet up on Twitter to discuss it afterwards. Similarly, The Charlatans frontman, musician, writer, DJ and record label owner, Tim Burgess launched an extensive series of “Tim’s Twitter Listening Parties”, where fans could come together, with Tim and members of the band, to ask questions and share memories. Credits Coping Mechanisms is a Somerset House podcast Created by Iain Forsyth & Jane Pollard Produced by Eleanor Scott & Daniel Breuer Music by Bernholz. Thank you to all the artists who have contributed to the series
With Antonia Quirke What does a film-maker do when they can't make a film ? Three directors share their audio diaries, in which they chart their lives in lockdown. Mark Jenkin was about to start shooting his follow-up to Bait when Covid 19 intervened. He now has to wait a year until he can begin again. Carol Morley set up her own on-line film club because she was missing the communal feeling of watching a film with an audience. Andrew Kotting's film The Whalebone Box was about to be released in cinemas just at the moment when they closed down. He was planning to go on tour with the film and catch up with friends and family around the UK and Ireland.
Life's a Gas by T. Rex and Lost and Lonely by Paloma Faith
Richard Coles and Shaun Keaveny are joined by Kathy Burke who became a household name in the 1990’s for her comedy roles in Harry Enfield and Chums, Absolutely Fabulous and Gimme Gimme Gimme. She won best actress at the Cannes Film Festival in 1997 for her performance in Nil By Mouth and is now a theatre director and writer. Dan Jones is an author of bestselling books on English history including The Plantagenets, The Wars of the Roses, and now the 20th Century. His historical sweep is broad, as is his career, which has included writing about men’s health and exercise, interviewing A-list celebrities and a regular sports column in the Evening Standard. Jessie Knight is currently juggling being a primary school teacher with training as a champion 400m runner. In the past it was a combination that Jessie found impossible, retiring early from her sport only to change her mind, resume training and go on to win the 400metres at the British Indoor Championships in February. Listener Sharon Yamamoto White tells the story of parents, who met in a US Japanese internment camp during the Second World War And film director Carol Morley shares her Inheritance Tracks. Producer: Laura Northedge Editor: Eleanor Garland
Director Carol Morley joins Anna Smith to talk about her #FridayFilmClub, the weekly watch party uniting film fans during lockdown. She shares heartwarming stories about the way it’s brought cinema lovers together, and explains how gender and diversity inform her film choices. She also gives an update on her upcoming films and tells how she discovered a young Florence Pugh while casting The Falling, revealing details of the schoolgirl’s incredible audition. Three listeners who responded to our #LittleWomenBookClub invitation join Anna from their homes across the world. From the Netherlands, mother and daughter Lauri and Julia explain how the book has been passed down the generations in their family, and in the UK, 13-year-old Hannah gives her verdict after picking up the book for the first time. Finally, Total Film magazine’s Editor-In-Chief, Jane Crowther, returns to Girls On Film to review three new digital releases: female spy thriller The Rhythm Section starring Blake Lively, erotic psychodrama Who You Think I Am starring Juliette Binoche, and buddy comedy Like A Boss, starring Tiffany Haddish, Rose Byrne and Salma Hayek. If you’d like to take part in the Little Women Book Club by reading with us, follow us on socials. Hashtag #littlewomen and #littlewomenbookclub and tell us what you’re loving about the book, and any of your reactions to it, whether it’s which character you most relate to or your own feminist analysis. Read it before the film’s digital release on 11th May 2020 so we can all watch it together (you can own a copy from 25th May). Girls On Film is an HLA production, produced by Hedda Archbold and Jane Long. Intern: Heather Dempsey. Thanks to Benjamin Cooke. Follow us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/GirlsOnFilm_Pod www.twitter.com/annasmithjourno @_CarolMorley @totalfilm_jane www.twitter.com/sonypicsathome This Isolation Pod was recorded in lockdown, April 2020
Neste episódio, continuo o ciclo “Mais estranho que a ficção”, dedicado ao cinema documental, com dois filmes sobre apatia urbana que pretendem recuperar a memória de duas pessoas desaparecidas em circunstâncias extraordinárias: “Dreams of a Life”, filme de Carol Morley de 2011, e “The Witness”, realizado em 2015 por James D. Solomon. Visitem a página segundotake.com, sigam-me no Facebook e no Instagram e enviem-me as vossas opiniões e sugestões para segundotake@gmail.com.
Carol Morley sets out to discover the life of Joyce Vincent, who died in her bedsit in North London in 2003. Her body wasn't discovered for three years, and newspaper reports offered few details of her life - not even a photograph.
MK3D Live! with David Holmes and Carol MorleyWant to come to a recording of a Mark Kermode Live in 3D show at the BFI Southbank in London?You can book tickets to next month’s MK3D here:https://whatson.bfi.org.uk/Online/default.asp?doWork::WScontent::loadArticle=Load&BOparam::WScontent::loadArticle::article_id=9FD162DC-3C10-43AB-ADCC-31364C1822AE&BOparam::WScontent::loadArticle::context_id=9F31E26A-0485-48B9-B9CB-4BA957BE7942If it says it's sold out - don’t despair, there are often returns so check again nearer the time.Follow Mark @KermodeMoviewww.markkermode.co.ukKermode On Film is produced by HLA Agency and Hidden Flack LtdProducers Hedda Archbold, Nick Freand Jones and Tom Whalley See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Another busy show, with the doubles of Us, the disappearance of Under the Silver Lake, the men on a mission of Triple Frontier, and the singalong of Fisherman’s Friends. Plus ahead of the release of her New Orleans crime drama Out of Blue we talk to British director Carol Morley. Mark Liversidge is joined by […]
We have another minisode! Abi and our lovely colleague Rosie interviewed British filmmaker, Carol Morley, director of the new film Out of Blue starring Patricia Clarkson (Sharp Objects), whilst she was on her tour of UK independent cinemas. Out of Blue is out in the UK on 29 March. Mike Hoolihan is an unconventional New Orleans cop investigating the murder of renowned astrophysicist Jennifer Rockwell, a black hole expert found shot to death in her observatory. As Mike tumbles down the rabbit hole of the disturbing case, she finds herself grappling with increasingly existential questions of quantum mechanics, parallel universes, and exploding stars - cosmic secrets that may hold the key to unraveling the crime, while throwing into doubt her very understanding of reality. The Cinema For All podcast is proud to be supported by the BFI, awarding funds from the National Lottery. HOSTS: Jaq Chell and Abi StandishGUESTS: Carol Morley PRODUCER: Jay Platt Thanks for listening! Please subscribe and rate and review our podcast – it really helps other listeners find us!
Jacinda Ardern New Zealand's Prime Minister has been praised for her calm, clear and compassionate handling of the Christchurch massacre but do women leaders really do politics differently? Journalist Anne McElvoy and former special adviser Ayesha Hazarika discuss.How has the terrorist shooting at Mosques in Christchurch New Zealand affected Muslim women in the UK? We hear from Rabina Khan a Liberal Democrat Councillor in East London, Akeela Ahmed MBE a social entrepreneur and activist and from Nadia Khan the co-founder of a mental health charity The Delicate Mind. The author Tomi Adeyemi talks about her fantasy fiction for young adults set in the West Africa inspired world of Orisha - and tells us why it took her so long to write lead characters that reflect her own culture.What does the discovery of a database called Breedready in China mean? Is it part of a bigger plan by the Chinese government to halt the countries declining birth rates? We talk to the BBC's Asia Pacific Editor Celia Hatton.Nice Nailantei Leng'ete tells us about the work she is doing in Kenya to bring about alternative rites of passage ceremonies to replace FGM.We have poetry to mark the Spring Equinox from Christine de Luca.Carol Morley tells us about her new film Out of Blue - a crime thriller adapted from Martin Amis' novel Night Train.Presented by Jane Garvey Produced by Rabeka Nurmahomed Edited by Jane ThurlowInterviewed guest: Anne McElvoy Interviewed guest: Ayesha Hazarika Interviewed guest: Rabina Khan Interviewed guest: Akeela Ahmed Interviewed guest: Nadia Khan Interviewed guest: Tomi Adeyemi Interviewed guest: Nice Nailantei Leng'ete Interviewed guest: Christine de Luca Interviewed guest: Carol Morley
Last week Cyclone Idai swept through Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe, leaving behind a trail of destruction, killing hundreds and affecting an estimated 2.6 million people. We hear from Sacha Myers, part of Save the Children's Emergency Health Unit who's currently in Central Mozambique about the current situation there . Plus Daphne Lagrou, Sexual and Reproductive Health advisor for Médecins Sans Frontières tells us why there's a bigger impact on women and children when disasters like this strike.Author Tomi Adeyemi talks about the impact of her first novel Children Of Blood and Bone which was hailed as a landmark publication in the very white and very male world of fantasy fiction. Losing your mum is a very difficult experience. It's especially hard at this time of year when we're bombarded with all the advertising and marketing ahead of Mother's Day. Three women who attended a symposium called Motherless Daughters - which aims to get women to open up about their loss and the impact it's had on them - share their stories.Director Carol Morley on her new film ‘Out of Blue' – a crime thriller adapted from Martin Amis's novel Night Train. What drew her to this neo-noir mystery ? and how have her own experiences influenced her directing? . Presenter Jane Garvey Producer Beverley PurcellGuest: Carol Morley Guest: Tomi Adeyemi Guest: Sacha Myers Guest: Daphne Lagrou Reporter: Georgina Hewes
Carol Morley was educated in fine art and film at Central St. Martins College of Arts. Her film The Alcohol Years was nominated for a BAFTA. Together with IFFR's Young Film Critic Pablo Staricco, Morley discusses her newest film Out of Blue and her definition 'a filmmaker'.
With Francine Stock. Nic Roeg, who died in November, had a profound effect on many British film-makers. Francine Stock hears from some of the directors who fell under his spell, including Danny Boyle, Asif Kapadia, Carol Morley, Andrew Haigh and cinematographer Seamus McGarvey. And there's a chance to listen to the man himself, including highlights from an edition of The Film Programme that was recorded in Roeg's living room. Plus, Jenny Agutter, Paul Mayersberg, Jeremy Thomas and Terence Stamp from The Film Programme vaults.
With Francine Stock. In the second edition of her new series, Moving Image, Francine Stock talks to director Carol Morley about the film that has influenced her the most - Jane Campion's debut Sweetie. Writer Ellen Cheshire provides backstory on the iconic director... and they are joined by a mystery guest.
In episode 2 of Girls On Film, host Anna Smith is joined by film critics Larushka Ivan-Zadeh and Helen O'Hara to review A Star Is Born, starring Lady Gaga and directed by Bradley Cooper. Films put to the Bechdel Test include Ant-Man and the Wasp, Pili, The Breaker Upperers, Bad Times at the El Royale and Venom. Finally, writer-director Carol Morley chats to Anna at the London Film Festival about her upcoming film Out Of Blue. Girls on Film is an HLA production, produced by Hedda Archbold and Jane Long. Follow Anna on Twitter @annasmithjourno
Jason Solomons is joined by directors Carol Morley, Wash Westmoreland and Naziha Arebi.
In this episode, I talk about Carol Morley's haunting 2011 documentary, "Dreams of a Life," which tells the tragic story of Joyce Carol Vincent, a woman who died in 2003 but whose body wasn't discovered in her apartment until 2006. No one reported her missing or noticed she was gone. Joyce was beautiful, talented, and had lovers and friends throughout her life. How had this woman been completely forgotten? Morley spent years searching for answers. Her film includes interviews with people who knew Joyce and re-enactments that imagine what she was like. In the end, Morley constructs a portrait of a complicated, mysterious, and ultimately unknowable woman, and she also probes important themes such as loneliness, disconnection, and the breakdown of community. Consider making this podcast sustainable by supporting it on Patreon. Subscribe to the Her Head in Films Newsletter. Follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Tumblr. Original artwork by Dhiyanah Hassan Full show notes: More about "Nitrate Flames" My episode on The Passion of Joan of Arc New York Times article "A Generation in Japan Faces a Lonely Death" The Hours by Michael Cunningham Wintering by Kate Moses Carol Morley vs Kevin Macdonald: video interview exclusive (Timeout) Dreams of a Life: interview with director Carol Morley (Telegraph) Joyce Carol Vincent: How could this young woman lie dead and undiscovered for almost three years? (The Guardian)
Singer and songwriter Tracey Thorn meets the film-maker and screenwriter Carol Morley. Tracey Thorn formed the duo Everything But The Girl in 1982 with fellow singer-songwriter Ben Watt when they were both students at Hull University. Together they released nine studio albums, and in the mid-1990s their single Missing sold more than three million copies around the world. Since 2007, Tracey has released four solo albums, and published an acclaimed memoir, Bedsit Disco Queen: How I Grew Up and Tried to be a Pop Star. Carol Morley grew up in Stockport and was in a band by the age of 14, because she felt it was the place 'where real life took place' - although she now admits she couldn't sing. She later studied film and video. In 2011 she wrote and directed Dreams of a Life, an investigative drama-documentary about Joyce Carol Vincent, who died towards the end of 2003, but lay undiscovered in her London flat until early 2006. More recently she has scripted and directed Out Of Blue, based on the novel Night Train by Martin Amis. For Only Artists, Carol and Tracey reflect on the art of editing, on whether the film and music industries have changed in the past decade, and the pleasures of writing - including the joy of finding an unusual rhyme when writing lyrics. Producer Katy Hickman.
Sheffield Doc/Fest was thrilled to welcome the acclaimed Salford-based actress and writer Maxine Peake to the Festival for the first time. Talking to Guardian journalist Simon Hattenstone Maxine discussed her love of documentary film and those docs that have inspired her life, her sense of humour, work and politics, including Andrew Kotting's idiosyncratic documentary Gallivant, The Alcohol Years by Carol Morley, Ray Müller's biographical doc about the German filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl, The Wonderful Horrible Life of Leni Riefenstahl and the classic British doc The Moon and The Sledge Hammer by Philip Trevelyan.
We hear from one of the freshest and most distinctive voices in British cinema today – Carol Morley. After receiving her first BAFTA nomination in 2002 for the autobiographical film, 'The Alcohol Years', she went on to earn further acclaim for the moving docudrama, 'Dreams of a Life' in 2011. In this ScreenTalk, the witty and engaging Morley talks to film curator and critic, Briony Hanson, about her 2014 feature, 'The Falling'. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We're delving into the world of documentary this week with Carol Morley's 2011 film, Dreams of a Life. Just hope Orla's ready for a fight... This is The Recommendation Game, a weekly podcast where two film lovers take turns to recommend a film the other has not seen, they watch and then meet to discuss it. Spoilers are a given. We are Ricardo Deakin and Orla Mc Nelis, two filmy types who love waffling extensively about movies Follow us on Twitter: bit.ly/2fRzZzW Like us on Facebook: bit.ly/2fdF848
Producer, writer, professor and former studio boss James Schamus tells Francine Stock why he took the plunge and directed his first film, Inidgnation, after three decades in the business. In an exclusive interview, award-winning writer/director Carol Morley reveals what her next project will be, even before a word is written or a scene is filmed.
On 17 March 2015, Rosie asked acclaimed British film director Carol Morley about her follow to Dreams of a Life, The Falling. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
One of Mark's favourite films of this year is The Falling . He interviewed director Carol Morley recently at the Shetland Film Festival.
In conversation with journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer, hear one of our most exciting contemporary artists as she discusses her life, her work and the space where the two converge. BAFTA-winning British filmmaker Carol Morley is fast making her mark as an innovative director and screenwriter of challenging, enthralling subjects. From her compelling docu-drama 'Dreams of a Life', a moving exploration of the life of 39 year old Joyce Carol Vincent, whose body was discovered two years after her death in her Wood Green bedsit, to last year's widely-regarded BFI and BBC film 'The Falling', chronicling the spread of a fainting epidemic in an English girls school. This talk celebrates the publication of her semi-autobiographical debut novel, '7 Miles Out', a darkly funny, poignant and searing portrayal of a teenager growing up in the aftermath of her father’s suicide.
This week, we talk Jacqueline Wilson’s Katy, the BBC’s new sitcom Boy Meets Girl and the Carol Morley film The Falling. Show notes: bit.ly/1EMeAmy See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
If a tree falls in a forest and nobody is there to hear it, does it make a sound? That's the kind of head-scratching question that's popularly believed to occupy the time and brains of philosophers. It relates to the ideas of immaterialism proposed by Bishop George Berkeley who asserted that the only things that exist are minds and ideas in those minds. He said that matter didn't really exist and that, in any case, it was unnecessary to complicate things with such a concept. For Berkeley, "to be perceived is to be". But what happens to "things" when they are not being perceived? Did Bishop Berkeley really believe that his bed disappeared when he gets up in the morning and left the room? The answer is no, because there is the over-arching mind of God and God is always perceiving all things even when we are not. When Berkeley leaves the room God is still perceiving the bed so it doesn't pop out of existence. To try and get to grips with this Clare Carlisle talks to Dr John Callanan, a lecturer in philosophy from Kings College London and hears a neat limerick on the subject by Robert Knox. She also talks to the filmmaker Carol Morley whose documentary, Dreams of a Life, explored the story of a 38 year old woman, Joyce Vincent, whose body was found in her flat amongst half wrapped Christmas presents, the tv switched on. She had been dead for 3 years and nobody had noticed she wasn't there. The reader is Peter Marinker. Producer: Natalie Steed.
Carol Morley-Beck interviews her parents Robert and Sue Morley about being the 3rd and 4th generations involved in the Morley Foundation, founded in 1948 in Saginaw, Michigan, and the causes and organizations they've supported over the years including Interlochen Music Camp, YMCA and Toledo Junior League.