‘Rise Of The Krays’ marches to US

Grindstone Entertainment Group has picked up North American distribution rights to gangster drama Rise Of The Krays from Carnaby International.

Simon Cotton (The Dark Hours), Kevin Leslie (The Third Testament) and Phil Dunster (The Filmmaker’s Son) star in the film, which charts the climb to power of the legendary East End twins.

Grindstone has earmarked a February 2016release with Lionsgate Home Entertainment handling distribution.

The deal was struck between Carnaby International’s director of international sales Tania Sarra and Grindstone’s head of acquisitions, Stan Wertlieb.

“The Krays are truly international criminal legends. This gutsy and gritty film tells the powerful story of their violent rampage to the top of the underworld. A ‘must see’ for true crime story fans,” said Wertlieb.

The deal comes after distributor Signature Entertainment shifted more than 80,000 DVD units of the film in the UK after releasing in August, which makes it one of the best-selling of the last five years for a home-ent only title.

Zackary Adler (American Romance) directs from a screenplay by Ken Brown and Sebastian Brown, who also produce with Craig Tuohy.

Carnaby, who recently struck a deal with Grindstone for Scott Eastwood thriller Mercury Plains, is also handling sequel The Fall of the Krays.

Universal is set to release the lucrative Brian Helgeland-Tom Hardy Krays biopic Legend in the US on November 20.

Samantha Barks dances to Hilary Shor romantic-drama

Les Miserables star Samantha Barks, Jack Davenport (Pirates Of The Caribbean) and Kate Walsh (The Perks Of Being A Wallflower) are among new cast to join producer Hilary Shor’s (The Paperboy, Children Of Men) romantic-drama Everything Carries Me To You.

Production is due to get underway in London next March on the story of a young ballet dancer (Barks) who falls for a seductive photographer (Davenport), forcing her to choose between her career and romance.

Emma Holly Jones is set to make her feature debut on the project also produced by Tom Butterfield (London Town).

Freddie Fox (The Riot Club), Ashley Madekwe (Revenge) and David O’Hara (The Departed) also star on the project in part inspired by a Pablo Neruda poem. Carnaby handles international sales.

Director Jones said: ‘We are enormously excited to have secured our cast – Samantha and Jack Davenport bring a unique and captivating quality to our lead characters.

JOB POST: Post Production Assistant / Assistant Editor

‘POST PRODUCTION ASSISTANT’ / ‘ASSISTANT EDITOR’

THE OPPORTUNITY

– Working for a well-known British film company based in Soho, London.

– Working directly for the Head of Post Production

– Assisting on Feature Film titles, Film Trailers and other video output at one of the UKs fastest growing film companies. Developing your skills and understanding of the industry alongside established Post Production experts and Producers.

– Potential credits on feature film titles

THE ROLE

– Liaising with the Head of Post Production in the co-ordination between all Offline, Online, VFX and Audio companies involved in the Post-Production of a project. Assuring smooth work-flow of files.

– Logging all incoming rushes & set up Avid and Premier Pro projects

– Troubleshooting Avid, Premier Pro and other Editing software

– Conforming from Offline to Online

– Archiving. Assuring all files and projects have a watertight back-up procedure

– Managing assets created by freelance creatives

– Assisting in the Offline and Online Editing of projects in Adobe Premier Pro and Avid Media Composer

– Keeping clients/producers up to date on progress of projects, arranging meetings and review sessions

– Developing new clients relationships, searching for potential new projects for the company to undertake.

SKILLS REQUIRED

– Excellent knowledge of Avid Media Composer & Adobe Premier Pro. Good knowledge of Adobe Creative Suite.

– Knowledge of Final Cut Pro, Da Vinci Resolve,VFX, Adobe After Effect advantageous.

– Very good technical troubleshooting

– Good Organisational skills

– Previous experience of Post-Production workflows on Long Form projects advantageous.

– Advanced understanding of Video codecs and file formats

– Some experience of digital marketing /graphic design abilty advantageous

Please email a CV. A brief cover letter is optional.
Please only email if you have the relevant experience and skills. London based.
Please only email, not call.
We may get many applications so apologies if we can’t reply to them all.
Thank you for your time applying. Good luck.
creative@carnabyinternational.com

Osy Ikhile makes Screen Internationals ‘Stars of Tomorrow’

Past Stars of Tomorrow selected by Screen include Benedict Cumberbatch (2004), Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne (2005), Suffragette star Carey Mulligan, Star Wars: The Force Awakens actor John Boyega (2011) and last year’s cover stars Taron Egerton, Olivia Cooke and Sam Keeley.

Stars of Tomorrow editor Fionnuala Halligan curates the stars after considering hundreds of candidates and consulting with industry experts including casting agents, talent agents, managers, producers and directors.

Osy Ikhile, actor, appeared in Ron Howard’s In The Heart of the Sea, starred opposite Robert Sheehan in Jet Trash, with Rachel Hurd-Wood and Iain Glen in Beautiful Devils and most recently in David Yates’ Tarzan;

Doctor Who’s Freema Agyeman gets violent in new gangster movie North v South

After a racy turn in Netflix drama Sense8 and a spell in Law & Order: UK, it’s safe to say that Freema Agyeman has put her days as a Doctor Who companion behind her – but if anything scrubs Martha Jones from people’s minds it’ll be her latest role in gritty crime drama North v South.

In a RadioTimes.com exclusive, this new trailer shows Agyeman as Penny, a woman embroiled in a crime war between northern and southern UK gangs who jumps into the fray with reckless abandon.

Attacking her London rivals with guns and knives, Penny claims she’ll do “whatever has to be done” to win the war.

It’s certainly lightyears from the sort of roles we’ve seen Agyeman play in the past. What WOULD the Doctor think?

Agyeman will be joined in North v South by Keith Allen, Steven Berkoff, Bernard Hill and Charlotte Hope as the various members of the warring clans. The film will be released in UK cinemas on 16 October.

Jonathan Rhys Meyers To Topline ‘Shambhala’

Jonathan Rhys Meyers has signed on for the lead in the new drama Shambhala, set to begin filming this fall. Shambhala follows the sole survivor of a plane crash in the mountains of Pakistan who must deal with that trauma against the backdrop of an alien culture and language. The story will be told non-chronologically, emphasizing themes of enlightenment and redemption. The film also stars Australian/Indian actress Pallavi Sharda (Lion), and English born actor Akshay Kumar (Homeland).

Grindstone Takes North American Rights to ‘Mercury Plains’

LONDON — Grindstone Entertainment Group has acquired North American distribution rights to action-thriller “Mercury Plains,” starring Scott Eastwood (“Fury,” “The Longest Ride,” “Suicide Squad”), with distribution to be handled by Lionsgate Home Entertainment.

The film, which also stars Nick Chinlund (“Con Air,” “Training Day,” “The Chronicles of Riddick”) and Angela Sarafyan (“The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 2,” “The Immigrant,” “Paranoia”), sees a young man run away to Mexico, where he is recruited by the captain of a group of teens who fight drug cartels. Isolated at the desert camp and unsure what he is really fighting for, he proves himself by becoming the captain’s top soldier. As the Mexican police close in, he realizes that his only way out is to escape back to America. But first he must outwit the captain.

The film is directed and written by Charles Burmeister (“Columbus Day,” “Interview,” “Motion Detector”) and produced by Houston Hill (“Virgin Alexander,” “The Devil’s Punchbowl”) and Eric Watson (“Requiem for a Dream,” “The Fountain”).

The deal was struck between London-based Carnaby International’s director of international sales, Tania Sarra, and Grindstone’s head of acquisitions, Stan Wertlieb.

“Thematically, ‘Mercury Plains’ is incredibly current in light of the criminal drug cartels activities in Mexico and the United States. Scott Eastwood continues to shine as a real star on the rise,” said Wertlieb.

Sarra said: “The hard hitting and compelling storylines have a universal appeal, which will resonate with audiences around the world.”

Carnaby International, which is handling worldwide sales, will screen extended promo footage from “Mercury Plains” with buyers at this week’s Toronto Film Festival. It will have its industry world premiere at AFM in November.

☆☆☆☆ Review for ‘Rise Of The Krays’

THIS REVIEW WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN BRITFLICKS MAGAZINE AUGUST 2015 (Credit, Joanna Ebuwa)

‘We grew up in a world where men on both sides of the law; were measured by a single store of values. Violence was the currency of choice.’

This latest British gangster origins story is a truly authentic piece of cinematic history. In the RISE OF THE KRAYS, We begin with Ronnie (Simon Cotton) & Reggie (Kevin Leslie) as teens in East London and how they came to become feared and respected gangsters. We see the twins’ seemingly unbreakable bond develop from them both contracting Diphtheria as babies, to schoolboy boxing champions, to teen guys on the street to full-fledged organised crime family frontmen.

The biopic is told from the perspective of one of their long-time friend’s who survived both brothers, the voiceover narrative maintains the twin’s primary strategy in life and business – strike first.

Coming right on cue against the eagerly anticipated rival in Tom Hardy’s LEGEND, this low budget project is directed by Zackary Adler and co-written by Ken & Sebastian Brown. Ken Brown grew up in the Hackney area where the Krays grew to fame.  A fact that builds a sense of rich authenticity to the story’s foundations.

The story deftly picks through the burgeoning, violent tendencies of the gang, the equally heavy-handed brutality of police officers, to Ronnie’s development as the crazed businessman with a penchant for reading Winston Churchill’s speeches and acting on those words in extreme ways. We have a well -rounded origins story that takes a kaleidoscopic approach to events shifting from different groups and perspectives cleanly.

From taking over the Regal Snooker bar, the Krays began to build their empire while simultaneously taking on every major gang in London. Once the east end is covered, they move onto the West End, clubs and gambling to cover more territory. What is consistent is the sense of loyalty and the code between gangs and the world they live in. As success expands, the violence upgrades from fists, to knives, swords to guns and Ronnie’s paranoia and taste for blood marks changes to that code and the rules they all follow and looks set to damage the world they want to run.

kraysreviewstill

The two leads Cotton and Leslie show a great synchronicity as the brothers Kray, embracing the words ‘The immortal twosome’ as used in the film. Their scenes together are raw, powerful and pained as the twins who are strongest together but when they lose connection, everything falls apart.

Cotton fully embraces the darker elements of Ronnie’s personality and the quietly psychotic, dangerous behaviour brought on by his schizophrenia. Through his individual scenes intercutting with flashbacks of Ronnie as a sick child with his mother, extreme close-up shots on his face, we begin to gain an understanding of his descent into madness and how his actions divided the gang.

Leslie by comparison plays Reggie, as the more the gentleman criminal, using menace and business savvy to expand rather than picking fights. He reflects the human cost of Ronnie’s fearsome rule with equal quiet strength and conflicted pain at losing his twin to his mental illness. He sees he is losing Ronnie and there is nothing he can do to save him. The worse Ronnie becomes, the more driven Reggie becomes to turn away from organised crime and look to legitimate means to keep their success.

The developing personality differences become increasing evident as Ronnie becomes more impulsive and blood thirsty, Reggie becomes more reasonable, calm and protective. Reggie alongside friend, Dickie (Phil Dunster) act as mirrors against Ronnie to show degrees of acceptable violence and behaviour in this world.

The production value and period look of 1950’s – 1960’s London is an amazing, aesthetic wonderland paying respectful tribute to the East End of London at that time.

Zackary Adler delivers a well constructed origins story that gives us a universal picture of the organised crime world from various gangs perspective. He creates a rich, well drawn out world and the cast work together cohesively to generate three-dimensional, honest characters who understand their world responds to violence and respect and look for their own means to find their places in it.

Ken & Sebastian Brown’s script is detailed and captures the tone of the period extremely well. We believe in the world and the characters because of Ken’s Brown’s closeness to the action and this draws the audience in and keeps them in the story.

RISE OF THE KRAYS is a standout film; which hits several good notes for the genre and against predecessors.

“Damascus Cover” not affected by Relativity’s bankruptcy filings

LONDON — A spokesperson for sales company Carnaby International has confirmed that espionage thriller “Damascus Cover,” starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers and John Hurt, is not one of the “casualties” of Relativity Media’s decision to file for Chapter 11.

“As an official representative of the film, I can confirm that there are no contractual commitments in place between these two parties and the film is still in pre-sale negotiations with buyers worldwide,” said Carnaby’s press representative, Hayley Hamburg, director of Rave PR. Hamburg issued the statement Monday in response to “inaccurate reports” in a trade publication, not Variety, and the BBC. Both erroneous reports have been corrected.

At the Cannes Film Festival, “Damascus Cover” went to South Africa’s Crystal Brook, India’s Empire Networks, Vietnam’s Vistcom and China’s HGC. At Berlin, it had been sold to Gulf Films (Middle East), PT Prima Cinema (Indonesia), Flins y Piniculas (Spain), Discovery (former Yugoslavia) and KRU Group (Malaysia). Discussions with North American distributors are on-going. The film will have its industry premiere at the American Film Market in November.

Set in 1989, the pic focuses on a veteran spy sent undercover in Syria to smuggle a chemical weapons scientist and his family out of Damascus.