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Michael Hadley Movies

2009  
R  
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In mid- to late-'60s Britain, an unusual yet colorful subculture sprang up and thrived as a product of the upswing in British pop music, only to meet its doom within a few short years. Though the BBC functioned as the country's main source of news and music, its programmers offered very little airtime to rock & roll -- which left an overwhelming need unfulfilled. In response, small bands of "pirate" radio enthusiasts set up broadcasting towers on boats just outside of English boundary waters, and transmitted signals to an estimated 25 million listeners, 24 hours a day and seven days per week. Unsurprisingly, the DJs who took charge of these broadcasts could rival just about anyone in terms of flamboyance and outsized personalities. With Pirate Radio (released as The Boat That Rocked in the U.K.), writer-director Richard Curtis (Love Actually) travels back to the Swinging Sixties and takes a headfirst plunge into this colorful realm.

The story opens in 1966, aboard a rusty fishing trawler christened Radio Rock and equipped with pirate broadcasting equipment. Here, the slightly daft elitist Quentin (Bill Nighy) presides over a motley crew of joint-toking, sex-hungry disc jockeys including Dave (Nick Frost), a heavyset boob who nevertheless considers himself a hot property with women and loves to chase skirts; "The Count" (Philip Seymour Hoffman), an American DJ who aspires to be the first person to drop an F-bomb over the British airwaves; the gloom-laden Irishman Simon (Chris O'Dowd); bonked-out hipster Thick Kevin (Tom Brooke); womanizer Mark (Tom Wisdom); Angus (Rhys Darby), a New Zealander whom nobody likes; and the only female member of the group, lesbian cook Felicity (Katherine Parkinson). These misfits pull off quite a show -- enough of one that they attain the status of national idols for the youth culture -- but the super-conservative government minister Dormandy (Kenneth Branagh) detests the whole business and will do almost anything in his power to shut them down. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Starring:
Philip Seymour HoffmanBill Nighy, (more)
 
2007  
 
Deeply disappointed with her life in middle age but unsure of what actions she should take to remedy her malaise, a forty-something woman named Anna (Kathryn Worth) is forced to acknowledge her inner turmoil after arriving at the holiday home of a bourgeois family and becoming distracted by the youthful energy in the home. Anna was in Italy visiting her old friend Verena (Mary Roscoe) when the antics of the energetic teenagers in the house found her gravitating every further away from "the olds." It's bumptious adolescent Oakley (Tom Hiddleston) whose youthful vigor stirs something deep within the dejected woman, and before long Anna realizes that her attraction to the boy may result from her longing to claim something that has been missing from her own life. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Kathryn WorthTom Hiddleston, (more)
 
1993  
 
This film is one of a ten-part series that chronicles the art scene in Paris from the 1890s through World War II. Montparnasse was the artists' quarter of the city, with a thriving cafe society. Artists and writers gathered there to discuss art and the issues of the day. This program looks at the impact on the art community of the controversial building of the Eiffel Tower for the World Exhibition, as well as the coming wave of Cubism. Russian artist Zadkine, art dealer Kahnweiler, and Sonia Delaunay share their impressions of the times. ~ Rose of Sharon Winter, Rovi

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