Antonia Bird Movies
Dedicated to the understanding of the human condition, British director Antonia Bird examines the harrowing pain caused by the neglect of human need. Whether the subject is a homeless teenager or a homosexual clergyman, Bird's emphasis on basic human rights is fundamentally the same. Her resulting cinematic approach is realist, aggressive, and visceral, she confronts each scene directly and unforgivingly, distilling the action to extract its pure emotional essence.Bird was born in 1959 to a modest middle-class English family. Her father, a struggling actor, named her Antonia while he enjoyed a rare and brief stint as Antonio in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice. Bird's mother, embracing the fact that her husband's employment would be infrequent, provided the household income. She waitressed, cleaned, and sacrificed to support her family. An only child, Bird compensated for her isolation by cultivating a fertile imagination. By the time she was a teenager, her rich fantasy life doubled over into an insatiable penchant for acting. This desire to be an actress was not well-received by Bird's weary and experienced parents. Thus, at the age of 16, the imaginative little girl ran away to join the theater.
After spending two years acting at Coventry Repertory, an older and more independent Bird grew interested in stage direction. Shifting gears to become a theater director, she worked her way up from stage management to administration to a thriving directorship at London's National Theatre. She later advanced to serve six years as the Resident Director of the city's Royal Court Theatre (Britain's leading theater for new playwrights) and to work as the Artistic Director of the Theater Upstairs. Bird helmed plays by Hanif Kureishi, Jim Cartwright, and Trevor Griffiths and collaborated with the likes of Ian McKellen, Bob Hoskins, Ben Elton, and Samuel Beckett. Her stage oeuvre championed the liberal and intellectual left: she espoused socialism, feminism, and, overall, humanism. However, so did the majority of her theater audience and soon Bird sought a wider venue for her message: thus, she turned to film.
Bird was rejected by Britain's National Film School for being too successful and turned down by the BBC Director's Course, despite having been hired to adapt one of her Royal Court productions for the corporation. Her first screen opportunity came in the form of television when she signed on to direct the first set of England's infamous serial, EastEnders. Situated in Albert Square, a fictional neighborhood in London's East End, the soap opera was immediately heralded for its uncompromising look at urban life. EastEnders tore apart social issues and personal situations in a city environment, letting Bird hone her realist camera eye to her humanist cause. She went on to direct the serial Casualty (a multi-plot drama set in a hospital emergency unit) and several television films, including Inspector Morse: Absolute Conviction and The Men's Room.
Bird's move to the cinema began in 1993 with the BBC television film Safe. Based on the true-life experiences of London street kids, Safe is an angry and inspired account of the city's young homeless. This 65-minute plea for social change garnered Bird a Best TV Film Award from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts and the Charles Chaplin Prize for Best First Feature at the Edinburgh International Film Festival. It marked her first collaboration with actor Robert Carlyle, who would star in several more of Bird's movies, and with producer George Faber, who would hand her the script for her next BBC film, 1994's Priest.
Chronicling the experiences of a gay cleric and unabashedly revealing his loneliness and alienation, Bird did not intend to offend morality or Catholicism with Priest. Visiting with several clergymen in preparation for the film, she was stunned by their compassion and saddened by their isolation. Priest is not as expressly about sexuality or religion as it is about the very few modern men (gay and straight) who serve the church. The award-winning film received a standing ovation from its audience at The Sundance Film Festival, which included an ordained priest who lauded the film's veracity. Moreover, the film secured an international distribution deal with Miramax -- a welcome first for Bird. Shortly before Priest's American debut, it met with objection from the League for Religious and Civil Rights, the U.S.'s largest Catholic civil rights organization. The group teamed with The Life League to boycott Miramax and its owner, Walt Disney Co., for slandering the church.
Meanwhile, Disney had already offered Bird her first 35mm feature, the Drew Barrymore/Chris O'Donnell vehicle Mad Love (1995) which she completed several months prior to the Priest uproar. Bird filmed Mad Love as an R-rated teenage road movie about the forbidden romance between a manic-depressive girl and her well-meaning boyfriend. Her film questioned both institutional and personal solutions to mental illness, as well as parental control. Unfortunately, Disney forced Bird to edit Mad Love into a PG-13-rated adolescent-targeted piece, severely diluting its urgency and effectiveness. The film was a moderate success in the United States, but amassed very little applause for its director.
Bird returned to England to film 1997's Face, her acclaimed contribution to the British crime genre. Starring Robert Carlyle as a former activist forced into burglary by disappointment and apathy, Face is both a heist film and an essay on the death of idealism in urban London. It provoked critical comparison to The Long Good Friday and Get Carter for its brutal excellence and its direct approach. Bird did not hesitate to exploit cruelty and violence to drive home Face's message; the film's success solidified her reputation in Britain as a provocative and substantive filmmaker.
At the request of Carlyle, Bird followed Face with Fox 2000's Ravenous (1999), a grisly supernatural thriller/satire about cannibalism during the time of Manifest Destiny. Two directors had already abandoned the project, which starred Carlyle and Guy Pearce. Bird's take on Ravenous was as assertive and emotional as with her other films. The picture's bloody focus on cannibalism directly relates the practice to obsession, power, and imperialism. Ravenous received a mixed response from critics and was ignored by audiences, yet it has survived as a cult film.
Shortly before Ravenous' release, Bird, Carlyle, and broadcaster Mark Cousins announced the formation of their development company, 4Way Pictures. The group obtained a first-refusal deal with BBC Films and boasts over 12 projects in development. Its potential roster includes Bird's first venture into screenwriting, Rebekka, a semi-documentary about AIDS activist Rebekka Armstrong, a former Playboy Playmate who contracted HIV at 16. In 2000, Bird returned to television to direct Care, a BBC film uncovering child abuse in British foster homes. ~ Aubry Anne D'Arminio, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Colin Firth, Robert Carlyle, (more)
Robbie Coltrane returns as the mentally unsettled criminal psychologist Edward Fitzgerald in Cracker: A New Terror. Fitz returns to his home country after a decade in Australia, taking up the case of a psychologically disturbed veteran of the battles with the IRA who killed a man after the events of September 11, 2001. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
British film director Antonia Bird offers a chilling examination of the roots of extremism with this intensely-researched dramatization of the events leading up to the tragedy of September 11, 2001. Ziad Jarrah was perhaps the most secular and reluctant member of the Al Qaeda cell that would forever change the way the world views terrorism. In this film, viewers are invited to follow along with every history-making step as Jarrah and his fanatical group of religious extremists prepares to overtake United Flight 93, and strike terror into the hearts of those who would dare oppose their radical views. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
In 1847, many Americans made the journey across our continent in search of gold. Many failed to complete the journey or see their dreams come to light. Capt. John Boyd (Guy Pearce) found his way here thanks to an act of cowardice during the Mexican-American War; he has been banished to a desolate military outpost in California's Sierra Nevada mountains. Upon his arrival, he is greeted by a rag-tag group of soldiers manning the fort: Hart (Jeffrey Jones), the despondent commanding officer; Toffler (Jeremy Davies), the company chaplain; Knox (Stephen Spinella), the drunken doctor; Reich (Neal McDonough), the only real soldier of the group; and Cleaves (David Arquette), the heavily medicated camp cook. One day, Colqhoun (Robert Carlyle) stumbles into their camp. The half-starved Scotsman had been traveling with a group of settlers until they were snowbound. Unable to move forward, they took refuge in a cave, where once they ran out of food, they were forced to resort to cannibalism. Colqhoun barely escaped the madness -- or did he? Boyd and the soldiers hear of the old Indian legend of the Wendigo, which states a man who tastes the flesh of another steals that man's strength, spirit and essence. His hunger, however, will become an unstoppable craving. Like a vampire, the more he eats, the more he wants, and the stronger he will become, with death the only escape from the madness. The soldiers are soon drawn into the frenzy and Boyd is soon left with the choice of eating or being eaten. ~ Ron Wells, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Guy Pearce, Robert Carlyle, (more)
Five criminals with varying degrees of experience are brought together and torn apart by a major robbery in this hard-edged British drama. Ray (Robert Carlyle) was once a leftist political activist whose ideals were dashed by England's increasing political conservatism, while his close friend Dave (Ray Winstone) is an East End hard man with a long history in crime. Ray and Dave plan a heist that they expect will leave them set for life: the robbery of a major London security firm. Ray and Dave's new associates are Ray's one-time cellmate Stevie (Steven Waddington); Jason (Damon Albarn), whose uncle is veteran mobster Sonny (Peter Vaughn); and Julian (Philip Davis), an unstable young criminal with more ambition than experience. After the break-in, the gang discovers that their haul was far less than expected, which leads to infighting among the thieves over who should get how much, with violence and betrayal as the inevitable result. Face marked the screen debut for Damon Albarn, already well-known in England as the lead singer for the successful rock band Blur. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Robert Carlyle, Ray Winstone, (more)
A lonely teenager thinks that he's found love, but it turns out to be more than he bargained for. Matt Leland (Chris O'Donnell) is an intelligent but awkward high school student who is in the market for a girlfriend but not having much luck finding one. One night, while looking at the stars through his telescope, Matt accidentally trains his vision on Casey Roberts (Drew Barrymore), a high-spirited girl who lives on the other side of the lake near their home. Matt is smitten with her, and he maps out a scheme to meet her. He finds her brash and charming, and she seems just as fond of him. However, Matt doesn't know that Casey is manic depressive and has been in and out of mental institutions for most of her life. Her father Richard (Jude Ciccolella) wants to keep her in an institution, while her mother Margaret (Joan Allen) wants the best for her daughter but isn't sure what that is. Casey, however, wants to be with Matt, and she convinces him that her parents mean to harm her. They run away, planning to go to Mexico, but Matt begins to realize that Casey's mood swings are more serious than he imagined. Set in Seattle, Mad Love features an on-screen appearance by the Washington-based all-female hard rock band 7 Year Bitch; the soundtrack also features music by Nirvana, Luscious Jackson, Los Lobos, Cracker, and Grant Lee Buffalo. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Chris O'Donnell, Drew Barrymore, (more)
A priest is torn between church dogma and his personal beliefs in this British drama. Father Greg (Linus Roache) is a Catholic priest who tends to a parish in Liverpool. Like his superior, Father Matthew (Tom Wilkinson), Father Greg is not dealing well with his vow of celibacy. While Matthew has been discreetly having an affair with his housekeeper, Greg is homosexual, and he occasionally slips out to gay clubs for anonymous encounters with strangers. One night, Father Greg meets a man named Graham (Robert Carlyle) at the bar; when he bumps into him on the street a few days later, he realizes that he's falling in love with him. As Father Greg struggles with his sexual and spiritual identity, he hears a confession from 14-year-old Lisa Unsworth (Christine Tremarco), who tells him that her father has been molesting her. Mr. Unsworth (Robert Pugh) confirms his daughter's allegation during confession, and he tells the priest that he will not stop his incestuous behavior. Should Father Greg violate the seal of the confessional to save Lisa from further abuse? Priest, which opened in America on Good Friday, generated considerable controversy, both with Catholic organizations (who denounced the picture) and the MPAA (the film had to be re-edited to gain an R rating for U.S. release). ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Linus Roache, Tom Wilkinson, (more)
Safe is exactly what these London homeless youths and anyone associating with them isn't. This bleak, prize-winning drama explores the lives of Gypo and Kaz (Aidan Gillen and Katd Hardie), two twenty-ish outcastes, who raise cash by pretending to be a prostitute and her pimp, mugging anyone foolish enough to fall for their ploy. When they can't get by that way, they reluctantly consent to spend time at homeless shelters, but their disruptive behaviors there don't make them many friends. When they are bored with these options, there's nothing to stop Gypo from plunging a broken bottle into his chest to see if he can't get some free hospital time out of the deal. The raw subect matter and occasional full frontal nudity make this film one to keep the kids away from. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Aidan Gillen, Kate Hardie, (more)
Based on a novel by Ann Oakley, the British miniseries The Men's Room starred Harriet Walter as officer worker Charity Walton. Despite her status as wife and mother, Charity entered into a romantic liaison with a coworker named Mark Carleton (Bill Nighy). The ensuing consequences not only exacted a great emotional toll on Charity, her husband, her lover, and his wife, but also exposed the hypocrisies of the good-old-boy office mentality. The five 50-minute episodes of The Men's Room were telecast by BBC2 in 1991. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Filmed in both England and Europe, the weekly 60-minute British action series TECX starred Rob Spendlove as Chris Tierney, a former teacher and wine grower. Acknowledging Tierney's high intellect and crimesolving abilities, Italian criminologist (and Raymond Chandler buff) Fabio Cavalcanti (Urbano Barberini) asked Chris to help him establish a globe-trotting private-detective agency known as TECX. The new firm was answerable primarily to Brussels-based Souverain Associates, headed by Isabelle Souverain (Stephane Audran). Although Jenny Agutter is often listed as a star of this series, her role as Kate Milverton was more in the nature of a recurring guest character. Originally telecast on Britain's Central Television in 1990, the 13-episode TECX was syndicated in America to local PBS outlets beginning in 1994. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Kate Hardie starred in this five-part British miniseries as Rachel Hamilton, a fearless investigative reporter for a regional radio service. While covering the details of a suspicious property-development project, Rachel unearthed a vast government hush-up conspiracy. Not surprisingly, the parties involved were anxious to "hush up" Rachel as well -- permanently. Thin Air was telecast by BBC1 from April 8 to May 6, 1988. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
















