Iggy Pop on top form in philosophical thriller full of sex & rock-n-roll

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Iggy Pop lends his acting chops to Blood Orange, a short (83 minutes), not-so-sweet, but very satisfying noir-thriller set in Spain. If you are into films like The Last Seduction, Shallow Grave and House on the Edge of the Park, you will get some reasonable pleasure out of watching this. 

Our main man Iggy plays Bill, an aging half-blind rock star who lives in a villa with a promiscuous wife, Isabelle (Kacey Barnfield), with help from a pool boy called David (Antonio Magro). Lots of sun and no shortage of sangria have created the Life of Riley for these two, who live a very healthy life with sex thrown into the mix.

One day, an old flame of Isabelle, Lucas (Ben Lamb), turns up on their doorstep with paperwork pertaining to an inheritance belonging to his father, whom Isabelle was married to before Bill. Lucas is understandably miffed that he has been cut out of the will by his father, who has subsequently left it to Isabelle and appears to be focusing more than unhealthily on Bill, who also has one or two health concerns. Bill is smart enough to cotton on to Lucas’ intentions, and persuades the ex-lover to stay, thus beginning a chain of events down a seemingly darker path to revelation and closure….

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Director Toby Tobias’ background in music video production makes him the ideal helm for a film starring Iggy Pop, having worked on the likes of In Bed with Madonna and Spice World – the Movie.Blood Orange does have the slickness of any number of MTV-fave plays. 

Furthermore, at the heart of it lie some reasonable philosophies and exchanges between Lucas and Isabelle regarding the true nature of sex and love. Iggy Pop is actually very good in this film, giving a competent performance that evokes the best of the likes of gruff veteran Sam Elliott in films likeRoad House, for example, and that certainly adds to the appeal of the film. Often, the subtext of the film in noir is sacrificed for the shock moment or revelation. 

Blood Orange is tightly-scripted and sufficiently holds the attention. It does have legs and potential – and you cannot ask for anything more than that in a noir.

Blood Orange is out on DVD on July 11. 

Behind the scenes of Blood Orange with Iggy Pop

I am sitting in the waiting room of a Spanish vet with a sick cat and Iggy Pop. It feels like the strangest dream.

We are in Ibiza making a feature film, a noir thriller called Blood Orange. Iggy is playing the lead, an ageing rock star married to a beautiful seductress, and things get complex and dark. In these days of corporate movies and haemorrhaging budgets, it’s something of an anomaly. It’s the first feature directed by Toby Tobias, who wrote the script.

Toby is one of the hardest working people I know. He got Blood Orange off the ground with deft skill and blind faith. Blood Orangeis financed by investors, family, friends and credit cards. In the midst of this intense schedule, 15-hour days, 15 days to shoot the film, there is the feeling that something good is happening. There’s a crew of 25 brilliant technicians and creatives from Ibiza, England, Barcelona and Madrid. No one’s being being paid up front but we all care.

And in the middle of it all is Iggy. Iggy was a surprise; Toby approached his agent, he liked the script, liked the director, accepted that it was low budget, that it would be tough, and that the living conditions would be basic.

Iggy has a deco villa with views to the ocean, opulent on the surface but devoid of character. It’s built like an ocean liner, clean lines and balconies and turquoise pool. He calls it the “dorm”. We are like a dysfunctional family. The “kids” are the other actors: Ben Lamb, Antonio Magro and Kacey Barnfield.

My job is to “look after Iggy” and the other actors, but primarily Iggy. It’s the strangest and most dazzling job I’ve ever had. I have dropped everything, abandoned my family and stepped into the dream.

For me, Iggy’s music was a series of teenage epiphanies that led me from New Romantic shiny Pulp to a dark growling poetry that spoke about distant cities and limitless possibilities.

When I meet him, I’m so nervous I am basically mute. He has a huge grin and blue, blue eyes. We make the short drive to the set; Iggy asks if “this interminable mind-fuck will ever end”. I realise it’s going to be fine.

We have an editor on the set and some of the actors clamour around to watch the rushes. Iggy doesn’t. When I ask him why, he says: “I don’t need to. I know I’m fucking cool.”

Mostly we try not to destroy the location villa; it’s the epitome of luxury.

On the set Iggy strides around with a shotgun and dead rabbits slung over his shoulder; there are corpses and a lot of blood. Off set he reads his Kindle, the cat purring on his belly.

Very occasionally being with Iggy feels normal, but mostly it’s surreal. Our day has a rhythm; coffee and eggs are my collateral. Being with him is like having an amazing perspective on the world. I ask him if he prefers touring or acting. He replies: “They both suck.” On Nico: “She taught me two things, how to drink red wine and give oral sex”.

There are moments I’ll never forget: hearing his songs drifting down from the balcony in the morning, or looking for his script and glasses. “There was a time when all I had was a T-shirt and a penis and that seemed to be enough,” he says. But most of all it will be the cat.

The cat has adopted us as his family. Grey and white, and kittenish, he actively seeks the company of Iggy. The “butler”, a camp guy who lives in the garden in a cottage, tells us the cat “just turned up”.

Meanwhile we ricochet between one millionaire’s villa to another, like a Hockney painting, of whites, blues and greens, from our bizarre fictional world where dark events play out daily, to our dysfunctional family life.

We do not leave our villa – we are not near anywhere, and there is no time anyway.

We wonder who is in charge – Iggy? Jacques, the omnipresent owner of the location villa, or Chris, our smiling producer? It’s probably the cat.

Then one night the cat is sick. He’s listless and limp and seems to have difficulty breathing, and there’s some matted hair on his side. His benefactor is Eleanor, who’s here to learn about makeup, but bizarrely is sometimes Iggy’s stand-in. It’s about midnight and we’d just finished shooting, too late to take a cat to the vet. We tell the producer our concerns, and he rolls his eyes. I sleep with the cat on my bed, wrapped in a blanket; he drinks a tiny bit of water. I’m half expecting him not to make it through the night. Would we use the shallow grave on the set? Dark dreams stalk my sleep.

At breakfast, after hearing the news, Iggy says, “I think we should make the kitty our priority today.”

It’s been an intense schedule; this is his first free day in two weeks. Earlier I’d asked him if he wanted to go to a spa. “I don’t want to go to a fucking spa. What am I going to do, put seaweed on my face? I hate that music they play.”

So we drive to a suburban vet with our driver Jos, Eleanor and the kitten and agonise over its likely fate. It’s not looking good. Somehow the cat’s fate has become as important as the movie. Reality and fiction slide into each other.

We rename the cat – bizarrely christened ‘Sugartits’ by the crew – to ‘Pop’. Iggy laughs. We must be an unconventional sight in the waiting room, even in Ibiza, but no one visibly raises any eyebrows. The vet is a gentle sincere young woman who explains that the cat has probably been in a fight or fallen, and is having trouble breathing. And is female. Iggy’s surprised. “She kind of acts like a he.” She’s going to need to stay in the hospital for a few days on an antibiotic drip.

When a group of people work in such close proximity there needs to be an outlet for the collective neurosis. For a while it was the catering, which was often both surprising and disappointing. One of the commandments of film-making is Never Compromise on the Catering.

Toby’s devastated, he’s an amazing cook. The all-time low is pasta with sausages. Iggy is diplomatic. “It’s like welfare dinners at elementary school.” But some of us plot increasingly wild revenge scenarios on the chef.

But our team has collective neurosis and the thing that bonds us is the cat – its survival and fate.

Next we have to find her a home and it’s going to be a challenge. Ibiza is an island of cats, and everyone who wants one has one, and we only have a few days.

Jacques, the villa owner, is the obvious candidate, but he has four already. He tells us mysteriously: “I am the cat wrangler, I tell them the truth.” Bizarrely Iggy agrees. “He is.” I realise the cat is taking up as much of my time as the film.

The next day is Iggy’s other day off and we visit the cat at the vet. She’s looking much better, and the vet tells us she has three broken ribs, is in a lot of pain and would have died if we hadn’t brought her in.

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Many conversations about pet passports ensue. Iggy can’t take her to Miami – he has dogs. Eventually Sondra, who looks after the villas and is as mischievous as the cat, and similarly seeks the company of Iggy, agrees to take her. It is an emotional moment.

The film wraps. It is done. I tell Toby “it’s always been about the cat” and he agrees. To make a movie in 14 days seems like a small miracle. No animals were killed; in fact, the producer moves hedgehogs from the road at night and Ben rescues the beetles spiraling upside down in the pool. And the cat is saved.

For us the cat underlined that Iggy was someone great. We knew that he has a brilliant mind, is self-effacing, funny and subversive, but the cat made us love him unreservedly. At the airport Iggy asks: “Do you have any Euros, hon? I gave all mine to the cat.”

When I get home the world slides back into focus and it’s rather grey. I remember I have a screenwriting book called Save The Cat!I dig it out – the writer explains the Save the Cat scene. “They don’t put it into movies anymore. And it’s basic. It’s the scene where we meet the hero and the hero does something – like saving a cat – that defines who he is and makes us, the audience, like him.”

BLOOD ORANGE DVD/VOD home release!

Iggy Pop thriller BLOOD ORANGE hits iTunes & Amazon!

 

 

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Empire:

“Slickly staged and shot, this neo-noir deftly exploits its clichés… it teasingly intrigues, while Iggy Pop steals every scene.”

The Guardian:

“An entertainingly oversexed chamber piece with echoes of A Bigger Splash or La Piscine, the film unpeels layers of intrigue along with the clothes of its cast. It’s a promising debut for first-time director Toby Tobias.”

The Hollywood Reporter:

“There are echoes of Roman Polanski, Sam Peckinpah and Patricia Highsmith in these seductively amoral characters and their sexualized power games. Sergio Leone’s Spanish-shot spaghetti Westerns also exert an influence, notably in scenes of Pop wandering the parched sierra in cowboy hat and stubble, coolly blasting rabbits with a shotgun. “

Set in the hills of Southern Spain, home to an ageing rock star, Bill and his much younger very beautiful wife Isabelle. Beneath the perfect surface of their lives, dark secrets lurk. Into this paradise comes Lucas – a dangerous ex-lover hell bent on revenge. His aim? To destroy their marriage and blackmail Isabelle into returning his inheritance – a fortune that his wealthy father had bequeathed to her instead of him. In a mischievous game of cat and mouse, the hunter soon becomes the hunted – nothing is what it seems. What unfolds is a dangerous, tangled web of deceit and destruction in a deadly game.

Olga Kurylenko joins Antonio Banderas in Simon West’s ‘Salty’

Shoot underway in Chile on crowd-funded action-comedy from Con Air director.

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Olga Kurylenko (Quantum Of Solace) will star opposite Antonio Banderas in Simon West’s (Con Air) action-comedySalty, which begins principal photography today in Chile.

Kurylenko will play Sheila Enry wife of Banderas’ Turk Enry, an ageing rock star and reformed sex addict married to a supermodel who is abducted by pirates on holiday in Chile.

The partly crowd-funded film is being produced by Los Angeles and UK-based production company, Simon West Productions and is adapted from the novel by Mark Haskell Smith.

Producers are Jib Polhemus (Lara Croft: Tomb Raider) and Harry Stourton (Lara Croft: Tomb Raider) with screenplay by Mark Haskell Smith (TV series Star Trek Voyager) and Toby Davies (The Mitchell and Webb Look).

Director West said: “I’m delighted Olga has joined Antonio and the rest of the cast. Her talents in both action and comedy make her the perfect ‘Sheila’. I’m excited about the prospect of shooting in Chile, I’ve been very impressed by what I’ve found here in terms of talent and wonderful locations – I know we’re going to make a great movie.”

Signature, Carnaby team on ‘Footsoldier’ prequel, ‘Krays’ feature

Rise Of The Footsoldier: The Beginning will act as a prequel to 2007 crime feature Rise Of The Footsoldier, charting the story of the Essex Range Rover murders and gang member Pat Tate.

The film will see the return of Craig Fairbrass (St. George’s Day) as Tate as well as Julian Gilbey (A Lonely Place To Die) who wrote and directed the original film as writer and producer. Zackary Adler (The Rise Of The Krays) will direct.

Signature will distribute in the first quarter of 2017 after striking a deal with Carnaby which is handling world sales rights.

Commenting on the deal, Signature owner and MD Marc Goldberg said: “Everybody at Signature and Carnaby are delighted to be working together again on this iconic British franchise.

“Rise of the Footsoldier Part II was an enormous UK success selling more than 45,000 physical units in its first week of release, beating multi-million pound box-office releases including Sinister 2 and The TransporterRefuelled and going on to win the best British movie at this year’s National Film Awards.”

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Meanwhile Krays And The Mafia, will chart the story of the East End twins’ hunt for vengeance after their thriving business empire is rocked when a brutal murder leads them to suspect rival gang, The Richardson’s, are to blame.

The film marks the first co-production between Signature and Carnaby, who will distribute and sell, respectively. It follows on from home entertainment hits Rise Of The Krays – released in 2015 – and Fall Of The Krays – released in March this year.

Krays And The Mafia will reunite filmmakers Craig Tuohy and Zackary Adler and actors Simon Cotton and Kevin Leslie as the infamous East End twins.

Commenting on the co-production Carnaby International’s Andy Loveday commented: “Rise and Fall Of The Kraysbroke home entertainment records in the UK and both have sold more than 200,000 DVD’s and 200,000 digital transactions to date. The outstanding results are testament to the compelling story and quality filmmaking that will be delivered once again in Krays And The Mafia.”

Review round-up: BLOOD ORANGE

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Empire:

“Slickly staged and shot, this neo-noir deftly exploits its clichés… it teasingly intrigues, while Iggy Pop steals every scene.”

The Guardian:

“An entertainingly oversexed chamber piece with echoes of A Bigger Splash or La Piscine, the film unpeels layers of intrigue along with the clothes of its cast. It’s a promising debut for first-time director Toby Tobias.”

The Hollywood Reporter:

“There are echoes of Roman Polanski, Sam Peckinpah and Patricia Highsmith in these seductively amoral characters and their sexualized power games. Sergio Leone’s Spanish-shot spaghetti Westerns also exert an influence, notably in scenes of Pop wandering the parched sierra in cowboy hat and stubble, coolly blasting rabbits with a shotgun. “

 

Casual Encounters — out now!

Courtesy of Lionsgate, Casual Encounters is now available on all Video on Demand platforms (iTunes, Amazon, Google/YouTube, Cable V.O.D.) as well as DVD.

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After Justin (Taran Killam) gets unceremoniously dumped by his girlfriend, his friends Sammy (David Krumholtz) and Louis (David Arquette) encourage him to sign up for the dating site Casual Encounters. Justin embarks on a series of disastrous and hilarious hook-ups before he realizes that he likes his coworker Laura (Brooklyn Decker). Unfortunately, what happens on Casual Encounters doesn’t always stay there and the road to Justin and Laura getting together and pursuing their respective dreams isn’t as smooth as they hoped.

Carnaby at Edinburgh International Film Festival 2016

The line-up for the 70th Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF) has been unveiled by artistic director Mark Adams.

This year’s EIFF (June 15-26) will comprise a total 161 features from 46 countries including: 22 world premieres, five international premieres, 17 European premieres and 85 UK premieres.

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Highlights include the UK premiere of Disney-Pixar animation Finding Dory, in-person events that include US indie filmmaker Kevin Smith and Sex & The City actress Kim Cattrall, and the opening and closing gala world premieres of the previously announced Tommy’s Honourand Whisky Galore!.

Old classics will be re-imagined with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra performing the score to E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial live at Edinburgh’s Festival Theatre and the world premiere of the newly-restored 4K version of Highlander, celebrating its 30th anniversary with star Clancy Brown in attendance.

The Best Of British strand will include 12 titles that will compete for the Michael Powell Award (see below), including opening film Tommy’s Honour and The Library Suicides, the debut feature of director Euros Lyn, whose TV work includes Daredevil, Sherlock, Black Mirror and Doctor Who.

Also in Best of British is the world premiere of Chris Foggin’s coming-of-age drama KIDS IN LOVE, starring Will Poulter and Cara Delevingne; Jane Gull’s Down’s syndrome drama My Feral Heart; the world premiere of Graeme Maley’s Nordic noir A Reykjavik Porno; Simon Dixon’s mercenary drama Tiger Raid; and Benjamin Turner’s Ibiza-set crime thriller White Island, also a world premiere.

As previously announced, the festival will open with the world premiere of Tommy’s Honour, starring Peter Mullan and Jack Lowden, and will close with the world premiere of Whisky Galore!, starring Gregor Fisher, James Cosmo and Eddie Izzard.

Scottish actor Rose Leslie will star alongside Ray Liotta and Gina Rodriguez in family drama STICKY NOTES, from director Amanda Sharp.

Screen: ‘Kids In Love’ sets UK release

Coming-of-age feature to world premiere at Edinburgh festival.

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Kids In Love, starring Will Poulter (The Revenant), Alma Jodorowsky (Blue is the Warmest Colour) and Cara Delevingne (Suicide Squad), is set for release in UK theatres and on demand on August 26.

Signature Entertainment, which is handling the release of the coming-of-age British feature in theatres, will then release the film on DVD on August 29.

It will receive its world premiere at Edinburgh International Film Festival in June, where it will feature in the Best of British strand.

In Kids in Love, Poulter plays a young man drifting through his ‘gap year’ when a chance encounter with a beautiful woman (Jodorowsky) swerves his life radically off course. He quickly becomes caught up in a whirlwind of all-day parties and wild nights in London’s hidden dives with her charismatic friends.

The cast also includes Sebastian De Souza (The Borgias) and Jamie Blackley (Snow White And The Huntsman), Preston Thompson and Gala Gordon (White Island).

Chris Foggin makes his directorial debut on the feature, which is produced by Barnaby Thompson and Ben Latham-Jones. Screenplay is from Preston Thompson and Sebastian De Souza.

London-based Carnaby International is handling worldwide rights and previously sold the feature to Factoris Films for France.

Iggy Pop compares BLOOD ORANGE composer to David Bowie and stars in his new video

Iggy Pop has compared the composer of his new film’s soundtrack to David Bowie.

Iggy stars in new film Blood Orange, playing an ageing rock star troubled by his promiscuous wife (Kacey Barnfield) reigniting her romance with an ex-boyfriend (Ben Lamb).

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The music Iggy Pop performs in the film is composed by Tim Arnold, a veteran independent singer-songwriter who has self-released 13 albums.

Arnold told NME: “I know the people who made Blood Orange, but Iggy handpicked my music as the pieces he wanted to perform in the film. That’s very flattering.”

Iggy compared Arnold’s theme song for the film, Money Kills Love, to his old friend Bowie’s 1977 album ‘Low’, which Iggy sang backing vocals on.

Pop said: “They sent along a demo which Tim had done in a home studio. It had a noir, detective movie guitar riff that comes and goes, but mainly four notes of a very plaintive, simple saxophone theme, just four forlorn notes.”

“It could have been an outtake from ‘Kind of Blue’ by Miles Davis, or maybe side two of ‘Low’ by Bowie and Brian Eno. I liked it and they redid it with real musicians, which roughened it up. It reminded me a little of some things that Chet Baker did. I thought it was a real nice theme, effective for the film.”

Iggy Pop also appears in the video for ‘Money Kills Love’, which can be seen below.

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Arnold, who was the singer in Britpop-era band Jocasta, said: “It’s amazing that Iggy took the time to time to listen to my music, let alone compare it to David Bowie. I don’t know if he realised that apart from writing it, I performed and produced it too. As an artist, it’s really reinforced my self-belief.”

The singer added that he gave Iggy Pop a copy of his William Shakespeare-themed album ‘Sonnet 155’ after hearing that The Stooges vocalist is a Shakespeare fan.

Arnold and Iggy both appear at the Isle Of Wight Festival on June 11.