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Big Gay Picture Show

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema and more

Taking a look at the world of film through gay eyes - news, reviews, trailers, gay film, queer cinema & more

Hugh Jackman & Zac Efron Get Musical In First Pics From The Greatest Showman

May 17, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Big budget original musicals are a rare thing in Hollywood (yes, we had La La Land, but that cost a relatively small – by Hollywood standards – $30 million), which makes The Greatest Showman something a little bit special. The first pictures from the movie, which stars High Jackman, Zac Efron, Rebecca Ferguson, Zendaya and Michelle Williams, have now arrived, and you can take a look at them below.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘“The Greatest Showman” is a bold and original musical that celebrates the birth of show business and the sense of wonder we feel when dreams come to life. Inspired by the ambition and imagination of P.T. Barnum, “The Greatest Showman” tells the story of a visionary who rose from nothing to create a mesmerizing spectacle that became a worldwide sensation. It’s is directed by exciting new filmmaker, Michael Gracey, with songs by Academy Award winners Benji Pasek and Justin Paul (“La La Land”) and starring Academy Award nominee Hugh Jackman. Jackman is joined by Academy Award nominee Michelle Williams, Zendaya, Zac Efron and Rebecca Ferguson.’

The fact Pasek and Paul are on board is certainly a good thing, as their tunes were so vita to the success of La La Land. Take a loot at the first pics of The Greatest Showman below. The movie will be in UK cinemas January 2018. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: High Jackman, Zac Efron, Rebecca Ferguson, Zendaya, Michelle Williams  FILMS: The Greatest Showman On Earth  

Battle Of The Sexes Trailer – Emma Stone’s Billie Jean King struggles with her sexuality as she takes on Steve Carell

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

The 2013 documentary The Battle Of The Sexes reignited interested in a moment in tennis history that electrified the US back in 1973. Indeed, the doc sparked rival movies to go into development, with Fox Searchlight backing one starring Emma Stone and Steve Carell, while HBO was planning their own movie about the event. While the latter doesn’t look like it’s happening anymore, the trailer for the former has now arrived.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘The electrifying 1973 tennis match between World number one Billie Jean King (Emma Stone) and ex-champ and serial hustler Bobby Riggs (Steve Carell) was billed as THE BATTLE OF THE SEXES and became one of the most watched televised sports events of all time. The match caught the zeitgeist and sparked a global conversation on gender equality, spurring on the feminist movement. Trapped in the media glare, King and Riggs were on opposite sides of a binary argument, but off-court each was fighting more personal and complex battles. With a supportive husband urging her to fight the Establishment for equal pay, the fiercely private King was also struggling to come to terms with her own sexuality, while Riggs gambled his legacy and reputation in a bid to relive the glories of his past. Together, Billie and Bobby served up a cultural spectacle that resonated far beyond the tennis courts and animated the discussions between men and women in bedrooms and boardrooms around the world.’

The film is due out in the US in September, with a November UK release planned. Take a look at the trailer below. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Emma Stone, Steve Carell  DIRECTORS: Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris  FILMS: Battle Of The Sexes  

God’s Own Country & Bette Midler In Freak Show To Open & Close LA’s Outfest 2017 LGBT Film Festival

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Outfest is undoubtedly one of the most prestigious LGBT film festivals in the world. It’s now preparing for its 2017 edition, having announced the movies that will be getting gala screenings, as well as the fact that this year’s Achievement Award Ceremony will honour writer and producer Bryan Fuller (Dead Like Me, Hannibal, Pushing Daisies, Star Trek: Discovery).

After Fuller receives his award at the the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles on July 6th, Outfest will officially open with a screening of Francis Lee’s poignant feature debut, God’s Own Country, starring Josh O’Connor and Alec Secareanu. The British film, which got massive praise on its Sundance debut, is about a young farmer in Yorkshire, who gets into an intense relationship with a Romanian migrant worker.

The festival will then close on July 16 at The Ace Theatre, with Trudie Styler’s comedic Freak Show, starring Bette Midler, Alex Lawther, AnnaSophia Robb, Abigail Breslin, Ian Nelson, Larry Pine and featuring a cameo from Laverne Cox. The movie marks Midler’s first screen role since 2012’s Parental Guidance. Freak Show is about an eccentric but bullied teenager called Billy Bloom (Lawther). Despite attending a very conservative high school, BIlly decides to fight back on behalf of all the misunderstood freaks of the world by running for the title of homecoming queen.

Other gala screenings include: ‘a rare spotlight on a bisexual lead character in the West Coast premiere of the TV series “Strangers,” (U.S. Centerpiece) written and directed by Mia Lidofsky; the groundbreaking, Japanese trans family drama Close Knit (International Centerpiece) from filmmaker Naoko Ogigami; the World Premiere of Logo Documentary Films and Putti Media’s KEVYN AUCOIN Beauty & The Beast In Me (Documentary Centerpiece), directed by Lori Kaye, on makeup artist legend Kevyn Aucoin; and Awesomeness Films’ Behind The Curtain: Todrick Hall (Special Centerpiece), directed by Katherine Fairfax-Wright, following the life of multifaceted performer Todrick Hall.’

The full programme for the 2017 Outfest Los Angeles LGBT Film Festival will be announced on June 1st.

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BFI To Mark 50th Anniversary Of Sexual Offences Act With Major Cross-Platform LGBT Film & TV Programme

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Still from My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)

2017 marks 50 years since the Sexual Offences Act, which partially decriminalised gay sex in England and Wales, and marked the beginning of the gradual legal changes that eventually resulted in same sex marriage becoming legal in the UK (except for Northern Ireland). Many organisations have been marking the anniverary, including a major art exhibition at the Tate Britain.

The British Film Institute is also stepping up to the plate, intially at the BFI Flare London LGBT Film Festival, and now with a major film and TV programme. From June, the BFI is planning a two month film and TV season called Gross Indecency, and a one month Joe Orton season at BFI Southbank in London. There will also be a new online BFI Player collection called LGBT Britain On Film, a UK-wide touring programme of archive film kicking off at Pride in London, an international touring programme of classic LGBT shorts from directors including Derek Jarman, Isaac Julien and Terence Davies and a new BFI release of Stephen Frears’ and Hanif Kureishi’s groundbreaking, Oscar nominated, My Beautiful Laundrette, which is coming to Blu-ray in the UK for the first time. You can find out more about the season, courtesy of info from BFI, below:

GROSS INDECENCY – TWO MONTH SEASON AT BFI SOUTHBANK (JULY – AUGUST)
British cinema boasts a long history of carefully coded queers, but taboo-busting gathered steam from the late 1950s. The two-month season GROSS INDECENCY: QUEER LIVES BEFORE AND AFTER THE ’67 ACT spans two decades, bracketed by the 1957 Wolfenden Report and the onset of AIDS. A highlight of the season will be a screening of Daisy Asquith’s Queerama (2017), the World Premiere of which will open this year’s Sheffield Doc/Fest. Created from historical footage held by the BFI National Archive, Asquith’s film tells the story of gay life in Britain since the end of the First World War, taking us into the relationships, desires, fears and expressions of gay men and women throughout the 20th Century, against a soundtrack that includes John Grant, Goldfrapp and Hercules & Love Affair. Also included in the season will be special previews of BBC documentary The People’s History of LGBT+ (2017) and new drama The Man in the Orange Shirt (BBC, 2017).

Part one of the season in July looks at the lead-up to the Act, notable for the cinematic milestone Victim (Basil Dearden, 1961), which will be re-released by Park Circus on Friday 12 July and screen on extended run during the season. Victim denounced the poisonous, institutionalised homophobia gay men of all classes faced, and cleverly packaged the politics within an accessible crime-thriller. The film, and Dirk Bogarde’s courageous appearance in it, helped propel public discourse towards the 1967 Act and beyond – changing lives in the process. This period also saw major progress on the small screen. Britain’s earliest surviving gay TV drama South (Play of the Week, Granada Television, 1959), starred Peter Wyngarde as Lt Jan Wicziewsky, who visits a southern plantation as the American Civil War looms; Peter Wyndgarde will take part in a Q&A following a screening of the drama on Monday 3 July. The season will be launched with a screening of On Trial: Oscar Wilde (Granada Television, 1960), the gripping recreation of one of the most infamous trials in British legal and queer history. The screening will be followed by a stimulating discussion with experts who will explore the significance of Wilde as a queer historical icon and discuss the role of TV and film in shaping public moral attitudes towards homosexuality in the UK. Other highlights of part one will be two provocative BBC documentaries broadcast just weeks before the legislation was passed (Consenting Adults 1. The Men and Consenting Adults 2. The Women), British cinema’s first film to hint at a lesbian relationship The World Ten Times Over (Wolf Rilla, 1963) and a story of ‘Romeo and Romeo in the south London suburbs’ The Leather Boys (Sidney J Furie, 1964).

Part two in August will focus on television and film made after the Act, showing that it was a double-edged sword in its effect on real lives and on depictions of the LGBT community. Queer London was reimagined to misanthropic, even exploitative effect on foreign soundstages for The Killing of Sister George (Robert Aldrich, 1968) and Staircase (Stanley Donen, 1969); a world away from the tender bisexual love triangle of Sunday Bloody Sunday (John Schlesinger, 1971). We hope to welcome star of Sunday Bloody Sunday Glenda Jackson to take part in a Q&A following a screening of the film in August. TV mined the drag renaissance for anarchic performances and we’ll screen some of the best in a special drag double-bill of the riotous What’s a Girl Like You… (LWT, 1969) and Black Cap Drag (Dick Benner, 1969); the screenings will be followed by an after-party in BFI Southbank hosted by alternative queer East End night-spot The Glory. Audiences will also be able to see television’s first gay kiss between Ian McKellen and James Laurenson in the BBC’s broadcast of the Prospect Theatre Company production of Christopher Marlowe’s Edward II (BBC, 1970), Two Gentlemen Sharing (Ted Kotcheff, 1969) featuring a rare black gay character, and I Want What I Want (John Dexter, 1972), which saw cinema highlight trans issues. In 1975, Quentin Crisp put queerness on our cultural radar and the season will feature a screening of the newly remastered The Naked Civil Servant (Thames TV, 1975) starring the late John Hurt, as well as a screening of documentary World in Action: Quentin Crisp. Completing this survey, as the tragedies and triumphs of the 80s beckoned, will be Britain’s first explicitly gay feature film Nighthawks (Ron Peck, Paul Hallam, 1978).

JOE ORTON SEASON (AUGUST)
Original, controversial and obscenely witty, these are just some of the descriptions used to reference the work of playwright Joe Orton. Like all great geniuses, Orton was ahead of his time, as the initial failure of the theatre production of Loot attests (the 1970 film version will screen here), but as the austerity of the 50’s gave way to the sexual revolution of the 60’s, his work caught the spirit of the age. Ruthlessly exposing the hypocrisies of the establishment his delight in causing offence is palpable in every play, but always harnessed to a razor sharp wit and purpose. Across the TV plays and films presented in this season it is possible to chart his ever growing mastery of both stage and screen as he sets out his overriding themes of sex, death and homoeroticism from their first incarnations in The Ruffian on the Stair (ITV, 1973) to his perfectly formed last great masterpiece What the Butler Saw (BBC, 1985). 50 years since Orton’s bizarre murder that so strangely mirrored the world of his plays, he deserves reassessment as a most singular talent.

The season will include an extended run of Stephen Frears’ Prick Up Your Ears (1987), re-released on Friday 4 August by Park Circus and starring Gary Oldman, Alfred Molina and Vanessa Redgrave. Based on the life of Orton and his relationship with Kenneth Halliwell (his lover who ended up killing Orton), the screenplay was written by Alan Bennett and won acclaim on its initial release, including the prize for Best Artistic Contribution at Cannes in 1987. Other titles screening in the season will include Funeral Games (ITV, 1968), Entertaining Mr Sloane (Douglas Hickox, 1970) and an Arena documentary Genius Like Us A Portrait of Joe Orton (BBC, 1982).

LGBT BRITAIN ON FILM
LGBT life is explored in an online collection of over 50 newly digitised archive film and television titles taken from the BFI National Archive and other regional archive partners. LGBT Britain on Film will be made accessible to audiences in the UK via the BFI Player, with many titles free to view. These newly digitised titles from 1909 through to the mid-1980s, span film and television drama, documentary, current affairs and amateur footage. The collection includes Miss Norah Blaney (1932), where the pioneering lesbian music hall star performs ‘Masculine Women and Feminine Men’, and David is Homosexual (1978), a new BFI National Archive acquisition. This Super8 educational film made by the Lewisham branch of the Campaign for Homosexual Equality (CHE) follows David and the support he receives in coming out as well as featuring rare footage of the 1976 Gay Pride march in London.

ITV’s leading current affairs TV slot, This Week, broadcast two groundbreaking LGBT documentaries; This Week: Homosexuals (1964) and This Week: Lesbians (1965). This wasthe first time that the topic of homosexuality was directly addressed on British television, including interviews with gay men and women about their experience of social ostracism, miserable marriages and homophobia, as well as some tales of contentment. Although presented through a conservative lens, these documentaries marked a broadcast watershed moment in representation, and a major step for visibility.

LGBT Britain on Film also includes material from the Yorkshire Film Archive (YFA); We Who Have Friends (1969), looking at contemporary views on homosexuality and gay life in Leeds and London in the wake of the Sexual Offences Act, plus from Media Archive for Central England (MACE); What Am I? (1980), a very rare regional television documentary about the life of a trans woman and Gay Black Group (1983), exploring the formation of the landmark group in gay black history, featuring interviews with members about their experience, including filmmaker Isaac Julien. All of these archive offerings will be available to view on the BFI Player from June alongside contemporary queer hits such as Weekend (Andrew Haigh, 2011) and classic LGBT shorts and features including the work of Derek Jarman, Terence Davies and more.

The Independent Cinema Office (ICO) will tour a special feature length compilation of archival material from LGBT Britain on Film to cinemas and community groups nationally, in partnership with MACE, launching with a special screening at Pride in London Festival on Tuesday 27 June.

MY BEAUTIFUL LAUNDRETTE
Presented on Blu-ray in the UK for the first time, Hanif Kureishi’s and Stephen Frears’ Oscar®-nominated, My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) will be released by BFI as a Dual Format Edition on Monday 21 August. Their first film collaboration, Kureishi and Frears’s cross-cultural gay love story starring Gordon Warnecke and Daniel Day-Lewis was a cultural landmark of Thatcher-era film representing South Asian British experience on screen.

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New War For The Planet Of The Apes Trailer – Caesar and the apes are taking over

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes surprised many when it turned out to be a pretty good origin story. Then the franchise really upped the game with the excellent Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes. That means the next instalment, War Of The Planet Of The Apes, has a lot to live up to. And from the evidence of this new trailer, it might be a rather dark tale, but also one with plenty of action and intrgue.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘In War for the Planet of the Apes, the third chapter of the critically acclaimed blockbuster franchise, Caesar and his apes are forced into a deadly conflict with an army of humans led by a ruthless Colonel. After the apes suffer unimaginable losses, Caesar wrestles with his darker instincts and begins his own mythic quest to avenge his kind. As the journey finally brings them face to face, Caesar and the Colonel are pitted against each other in an epic battle that will determine the fate of both their species and the future of the planet.’

Andy Serkis, Woody Harrelson, Steve Zahn and Toby Kebbell  star, with Matt Reeves directing. The film arrive in UK cinemas July 14th 2017. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Andy Serkis, Judy Greer, Steve Zahn, Toby Kebbell, Woody Harrelson  DIRECTORS: Matt Reeves  FILMS: War For The Planet Of The Apes  

New The Emoji Movie Trailer – The icons are alive and getting their own film!

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

There are plenty of people who still can’t believe they’ve made an entire animated movie about emojis. While it undoubtedly seems like a desperate attempt to attract digital-obsessed youths, some early reports suggest it might actually be quite fun, and may possibly surprise in the same way The Lego Movie did (although there are still plenty of sceptics). If nothing else, Patrick Stewart as a poop emoji should be fun.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘THE EMOJI MOVIE unlocks the never-before-seen secret world inside your smartphone. Hidden within the messaging app is Textopolis, a bustling city where all your favorite emojis live, hoping to be selected by the phone’s user. In this world, each emoji has only one facial expression – except for Gene (T.J. Miller), an exuberant emoji who was born without a filter and is bursting with multiple expressions. Determined to become “normal” like the other emojis, Gene enlists the help of his handy best friend Hi-5 (James Corden) and the notorious code breaker emoji Jailbreak (Anna Faris). Together, they embark on an epic “app-venture” through the apps on the phone, each its own wild and fun world, to find the Code that will fix Gene. But when a greater danger threatens the phone, the fate of all emojis depends on these three unlikely friends who must save their world before it’s deleted forever. Directed by Tony Leondis. Written by Tony Leondis & Eric Siegel and Mike White. Produced by Michelle Raimo Kouyate.’

The film will be in cinemas next August. Take a look at the new trailer and poster below. [Read more…]

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Zac Efron Will Turn Serial Killer As Ted Bundy In A New Movie

May 16, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

If you asked someone what they thought a serial killer looked like, Zac Efron is not likely to be the answer. However, he’s actually a good choice to play the notorious Ted Bundy, a man who murdered at least 30 women, but was thought to be handsome and charming to those who didn’t know his secret life.

THR reports that it was announced at Cannes that Efron is attached to play Bundy in a movie that’s currently titled, Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile. The film, based on a black listed script by Michael Werwie, ‘Is told through the perspective of Elizabeth Kloepfer, Bundy’s longtime girlfriend, who went years denying the accusations against Bundy but ultimately turned him in to the police. Only nearing his execution, when Bundy began talking about his extensive and heinous murders, did Kloepfer, and the rest of the world, learn the true scope of his numerous and grisly crimes.’

Joe Berlinger, best known for his documentaries Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills, and Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru, is due to direct the film. It’s not clear when the movie might shoot, but it’s currently looking for buyers at Cannes.

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ACTORS: Zac Efron  

Gay Short Film Showcase: Wonderkid – Tackling homophobia in football in the powerful short

May 15, 2017 By Tim Isaac 2 Comments

Ever since it was first announced, there’s been a lot of interest in Wonderkid. Initially that was due to the backing of Ian McKellan, who showed up to narrate the Kickstarter video, and the fact it got a grant from the Kevin Spacey Foundation. It’s also got a powerful message, as young filmmaker Rhys Chapman’s film sets out to tack homophobia in football (that’s soccer to any of you Americans out there). The finished product has also proven a great success, including a launch at the 2016 Raindance Film Festival, and being broadcast on Sky Sports 1 HD in the UK.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘After earning a dream move to a London Premier League club, ‘WONDERKID’ should be on top of the world. The reality? He’s faced with callous friends, a hostile changing room, vitriol-filled messages on social media and, crucially, WONDERKID’s having to deal with himself. The film highlights the key issue – why should his sexuality be an issue?’

There are still problems with homophobia in football to be addressed, with the Wonderkid website pointing out that, ‘72% of football fans say they have heard homophobic abuse while watching live sports in the past five years.’ However, at the same time, ‘Nearly two thirds of people say more should be done to make LGBT people feel accepted in sport. Nearly 90% of supporters say they would be either ‘proud’ or ‘neutral’ if their favourite player came out as gay.’

Wonderkid is now available to watch for free. Take a look at the 32-minute short below. [Read more…]

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FILMS: Wonderkid  

Will & Grace Trailer – It’s as if we never said goodbye when the reunion gets musical

May 15, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

If anyone was worried things would have changed in the world of Will & Grace when it comes back this autumn, the musical trailer for the show’s return is keen to dispel that idea. With the help of a bit of Andrew Llloyd Webber (As If We Never Said Goodbye from Sunset Boulevard – but with new lyrics), the quartet of Eric McCormack, Debra Messing, Megan Mullally and Sean Hayes bring us something that may be camper than anything they managed during the show’s original run.

Here’s the synopsis: ‘NBC is bringing back its iconic comedy series “Will & Grace,” with stars Eric McCormack, Debra Messing, Megan Mullally and Sean Hayes.  The 12-episode run begins this fall, airing Thursdays at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

‘Original series creators Max Mutchnick and David Kohan will serve as writers, showrunners and executive producers. Legendary director James Burrows, who helmed every episode of the show during its initial eight-year run, will direct and executive produce.’

Take a look at the trailer below. [Read more…]

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ACTORS: ebra Messing, Eric McCormack, Megan Mullally, Sean Hayes  FILMS: Will & Grace  

Big Bang Theory’s Jim Parsons Has Married Boyfriend Todd Spiewak

May 15, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Long before Jim Parsons became famous playing Sheldon in The Big Bangs Theory, he was dating Todd Spiewak. The couple have been together for 14 years. Now they’ve decided to take the next step, as they have tied the knot and gotten married.

The duo walked down the aisle at the Rainbow Room in New York City on Saturday evening, for a ceremony attended by friends and family.

Jim and Todd started dating back in 2002. After finding success with The Big Bang Theory, Parsons spent some time neither being in nor out. As he said in an interview last year, “I took Todd along to the first award shows, as my date, and what happened? Absolutely nothing. And afterwards, nobody ever asked me: ‘Are you gay?'”

It was only in 2012 that someone finally asked the question and Parson casually confirmed he was gay and in a long-term relationship. Now he’s a married man, and continues to be one of the higest paid actors on TV, with at least two more seasons of The Big Bang Theory to come.

Take a look at a few pics from the wedding below. (The Tom Ford tuxes they sported at the reception are particularly fab). [Read more…]

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ACTORS: Jim Parson  

Manchester By The Sea (Blu-ray Review) – Inside broken lives doing their best in the Oscar-winning film

May 14, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Casey Affleck, Kyle Chandler, Lucas Hedges, Michelle Williams, Tate Donovan
Director: Kenneth Lonergan
Running Time: 137 mins
Certificate: 15
Release Date: May 15th 2017 (UK)

Despite allegations of past sexual assault swirling around Casey Affleck, he picked up the Best Actor Oscar for Manchester By The Sea, with Kenneth Lonergan also winning an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. Judging purely from what’s on the screen, you can see why they won, as Affleck puts in an extremely good performance, working from a nicely nuanced script which prizes emotion but tries to avoid cliché.

Affleck is Lee Chandler, who’s working as a janitor in Boston. He drinks too much, barely socialises and gets in trouble for being rude to tenants. He gets a call to say that his brother has died and so he heads to his hometown of Manchester, Massachusetts. Lee also knows he’ll have to help look after his teenage nephew, Patrick (Lucas Hedges) but isn’t prepared for that fact his brother has named him as Patrick’s guardian, something he doesn’t feel vaguely able to handle. [Read more…]

Assassin’s Creed (DVD Review) – Michael Fassbender brings the videogame to life

May 14, 2017 By Tim Isaac Leave a Comment

Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Charlotte Rampling, Jeremy Irons, Marion Cotillard, Michael Fassbender
Director: Justin Kurzel
Running Time: 110 mins
Certificate: 12
Release Date: May 15th 2017 (UK)

After witnessing the aftermath of his mother’s murder as a child, Callum Lynch (Michael Fassbender) has been on the run and fighting to survive, something that’s left him on death row. After his ‘execution’, he wakes up in a strange facility. The people who run it, led by Sofia (Marion Cotillard), have gotten hold of him because they want to awaken the ‘genetic memories’ he holds, which they can access through a machine called the Animus.

Once attached the contraption, he relives events that took place 500 years ago involving his ancestor, Aguilar de Nerha, who was part of The Assassins, a secret group fighting to stop the Templars taken over Christendom and ruling it with an iron fist. That involves a search for the Apple of Eden, where man’s freewill comes from. [Read more…]

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