Tim Rice's epic new musical From Here to Eternity was released in UK and Ireland Cinemas in July for a limited period giving fans the opportunity to experience the critically acclaimed stage show in their local cinema. The production was filmed across two nights at the Shaftsbury Theatre in London and directed by Nick Morris (Les Miserables 25th Anniversary Concert and Phantom of the Opera 25th Anniversary Concert). It will include an exclusive behind the scenes tour of the Shaftsbury as well as an interview with Tim Rice. Adapted from James Jones' classic 1951 novel it is a gripping tale of illicit love and army life set in 1941 Hawaii immediately prior to the attacks on Pearl Harbour. Having recently transferred to the base troubled Private Prewitt (Robert Lonsdale) falls for Lorene(Siubhan Harrison) the kind hearted escort club girl while simultaneously his platoon sergeant Warden (Darius Campbell) embarks on a dangerous affair with his commanding officer's wife Karen (Rebecca Thornhill) setting the lives of both men on a course they cannot control. As war approaches the worlds' of the four lovers and the soldiers of G Company are dramatically ripped apart. The title is best known as the iconic major motion picture that won eight Oscars including Best Picture at the 1954 Academy Awards® ceremony. It has been interpreted by Tim Rice Stuart Brayson and Bill Oakes into a breath-taking romantic and excitingly original show. Tim Rice is one of the world's leading lyricists having partnered with Andrew Lloyd Webber on productions of Jesus Christ Superstar and Evita before going on to work on the international smash of the screen and stage The Lion King. On having his latest stage spectacular transfer to the silver screen after a successful 6 month run on London's West End Tim Rice said “I am delighted that our ambitious musical version of this magnificent story is going to be available to cinemas across the UK. It's an epic tale with a score to match so it's fantastic that our version will get a big screen release” Bonus material (30 mins approx.) Exclusive behind the scenes footage at the Shaftsbury Theatre and interview with Tim Rice
Ronin is the Japanese word used for Samurai without a master. In this case, the Ronin are outcast specialists of every kind, whose services are available to everyone - for money.
Ronin is the Japanese word used for Samurai without a master. In this case, the Ronin are outcast specialists of every kind, whose services are available to everyone - for money.
Robert De Niro stars as an American intelligence operative adrift in irrelevance since the end of the Cold War--much like a masterless samurai, a.k.a. "ronin." With his services for sale, he joins a renegade, international team of fellow covert warriors with nothing but time on their hands. Their mission, as defined by the woman who hires them (Natascha McElhone), is to get hold of a particular suitcase that is equally coveted by the Russian mafia and Irish terrorists. As the scheme gets underway, De Niro's lone wolf strikes up a rare friendship with his French counterpart (Jean Reno), gets into a more-or-less romantic frame of mind with McElhone, and asserts his experience on the planning and execution of the job--going so far as to publicly humiliate one team member (Sean Bean) who is clearly out of his league. The story is largely unremarkable--there's an obligatory twist midway through that changes the nature of the team's business--but legendary filmmaker John Frankenheimer (Seconds, The Manchurian Candidate) leaps at the material, bringing to it an honest tension and seasoned, breathtaking skill with precision-action direction. The centerpiece of the movie is an honest-to-God car chase that is the real thing: not the how-can-we-top-the-last-stunt cartoon nonsense of Richard Donner (Lethal Weapon), but a pulse-quickening, kinetic dance of superb montage and timing. In a sense, Ronin is almost Frankenheimer's self-quoting version of a John Frankenheimer film. There isn't anything here he hasn't done before, but it's sure great to see it all again. --Tom Keogh
A huge critical and commercial success, this brilliantly engaging comedy stars actor, singer, poet, writer and award-winning playwright Michaela Coel as a religious, Beyonce-obsessed young woman who is fast realising that the more she learns about the world, the less she understands! Coel's performance won her the British Academy Television Award for Best Female Comedy Performance in 2016 with her writing for the show earning her a BAFTA award for Breakthrough Talent. This set contains both series 1 and 2. Set on a tough London estate, Chewing Gum follows 22-year-old Tracey Gordon as she leaves behind the innocence of teenage dreams and attempts to navigate a brave new world of love, sex and adult confusion!
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