Smuggler london films




















Kevin geoffrey Cormack Actor. W10 5PS. Trelawny Kean Actor. Christian Scicluna Actor. Raha Rahbari Actor. Hilary Whelan Actor. Serena Aglio Extra. James Fathers Sound Recordist. Janine McGhee Actor. Reis Daniel Actor. Anna McAlindon Actor. Alin Balascan Actor. Faaiz Mbelizi Actor. Luca Chapman Production Assistant. Maxwell Tyler Actor. Its young star, Bukky Bakray, and her castmates hail from east London they were recruited in a series of casting calls at London schools and know it inside out.

Selfies and shape-throwing are the order of the day as the summer sun beats down. Dirk Bogarde plays Melville Farr, a married barrister whose secret romantic friendship with a young man exposes him to blackmailers. Most London moment The homophobic old-school landlord of a West End pub moans about homosexuality to a woman at the bar and then hypocritically wishes a good night to a pair of regular customers, two older gay men.

London location Several scenes unfold in and around Covent Garden. London location The murders happen around Russell Square tube station. Aliens invade Brixton and the only thing standing between humanity and total annihilation are a bunch of mouthy hoodie-wearing kids on BMX bikes.

Most London moment Too many to mention, but the community-spirited finale is a strong contender. The greatest British gangster movie of them all? Crass and brutal but totally magnetic, his mob boss Harold Shand rampages across the city, powerless as his organisation crumbles before his eyes.

The past is another country. The pair also, secretly, happen to be in a relationship. The sequel has its devotees but this is where it all began: an sparkling origin story that captures the unique challenges and delights of touching down in a city where your feet rarely touch the ground. Most London moment Paddington having a run-in with a London Undergound ticket barrier.

Hard stares, TFL. London location The Natural History Museum plays host to a climactic showdown that involves a death defying break-in.

Worth keeping in mind next time the Wildlife Photographer of the Year Exhibition sells out. For their first big-screen team-up, writer-director Edgar Wright and writer-actor Simon Pegg brought shuffling zombies to south London.

Most London moment Where do our embattled heroes go when the undead hordes start rising? London location The scenes in the aforementioned pub, called The Winchester in the film, were actually filmed at the Duke of Albany in New Cross. London location Much of the film was shot on the now-demolished Ferrier Estate in Kidbrooke, Greenwich.

Most London moment The massive sound-system party in a Brixton warehouse is eardrum-batteringly authentic. London location Accused of stabbing his racist neighbour, Blue flees from the cops down Deptford High Street. First of the bunch was this mist-shrouded silent masterpiece, in which Ivor Novello plays an innocent man who happens to bear a striking similarity to a murderer targeting young blondes.

Say what you like about this city, but we love a get-together. Stick it to the man. But the railway arches on Lambeth Road are still intact. But this stark tale of shattered lives in satellite towns feels raw and concrete in the best London-movie tradition. He is Michael Fassbender, so kind of fair enough. John Cleese hauled Ealing comedy legend Charles Crichton out of retirement to co-write and direct this acid-tongued shout-out to the classic comedy crime caper. Cleese plays a barrister swept up in a robbery plot; Michael Palin outraged stutterers worldwide as an animal-loving getaway driver; and two Yanks, Jamie Lee Curtis and Kevin Kline, offer scathing observations on British life.

If London life is a constant oscillation between farce and deep despair, 'Withnail and I' hits those extremes like few other films. Most London moment Gina McKee gazes mournfully out of the night-bus window as life goes on around her.

Every single Londoner has done this. London location There are several scenes set in buzzing Soho and Leicester Square, as the characters find themselves alone in a crowd. London is a sleazy, amoral city of chancers, thugs, the careless rich and the helpless poor in this classic film noir by American director Jules Dassin working here in exile from the McCarthy-era communist witch-hunts in Hollywood. Herbert Lom and Googie Withers take hard-nosed supporting roles.

London location The rubble-strewn industrial South Bank is the setting for the climactic chase scene. Prince Charles is a faggot! Winston Churchill was full of shit! The film also sets up — and gorily chomps down — a cheerful array of British caricatures, from gobby cabbies to snooty businessmen. Most London moment David has visions of the living dead in the back row of a Soho porn theatre.

The long escalator still looks exactly the same. Most London moment A dedicated follower of fashion, Alex lurks round the local record shop in full Georgian dress, checking out the talent. London location Alex chucks his droogs into the river — in glorious slow-mo — just down from the Thamesmead estate.

Most London moment Impossible to pin down — the whole film is crammed with dotty old ladies, bumbling policemen, cups of tea and seedy criminality. But when the band get out and about this is a London movie through and through, from a sprint through Marylebone Station pursued by crazed fans to an evening spent at Les Ambassadeurs Club in Mayfair — which is actually still in business.

Most London moment George wanders into a fashion studio and laconically dissects the entire shallow industry. London location Abandoning the group, Ringo goes for a mournful saunter down by the Thames near Kew Gardens. The story of a murderer whose abuse at the hands of his scientist father has turned him into a violent sociopath, the film takes place in the seedy backstreets of Soho, a haunt of prostitutes, pornographers and riff-raff. Most London moment The scene in the newsagent, as seedy customers sidle in to check out the latest under-the-counter nudie pics.

What they choose to do about it is up to them. Sometimes several times a day. In a city still reeling from the Blitz, a married woman, played by Googie Withers, must contend with the reappearance of an old flame ex-con John McCallum. Responding to the challenges thrown down by American film noir and Italian neo-realism, director Robert Hamer crafted an extraordinary drama rooted in the everyday lives of east Londoners, but glittering with theatrical light and shadows.

Most London moment Refusing to allow her on-the-lam ex into the house, Googie opts to stick him in the coal shed. London location The breathtaking climactic chase scene takes place in the old Temple Mills railway yard in Stratford.

Then things start getting weird. Losey lived just across the road. The result is an exhaustive, often surprising list of solid-gold classics. Support Time Out directly today and help us champion the people and places which make the city tick. About us. Contact us. Time Out magazine. Discover the best of the city, first.



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