Hurricane Films

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Company typeProduction
IndustryFilm
GenreFilm, TV, documentary, promotional, educational
FounderRoy Boulter and Solon Popadopoulos
Hurricane Films
Company typeProduction
IndustryFilm
GenreFilm, TV, documentary, promotional, educational
FounderRoy Boulter and Solon Popadopoulos
Headquarters
Liverpool
,
United Kingdom
WebsiteHurricane Films

Hurricane Films is a film production company based in Liverpool, England. It has produced both documentaries and fiction films at both short and feature length. It is best known for Terence Davies' feature-length documentary Of Time and the City (2008).

The company was founded in 2000 by Solon Papadopoulos, a marine engineer turned filmmaker, and Roy Boulter, the former drummer for pop group The Farm.[1]

In the early 2000s it made several short films, often films with relevance to social problems or the local area, or films with a twisted take on popular culture. These shorts included Comm-Raid on the Potemkin (2000), a re-interpretation of Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin shot in the style of a video game, by the Irish director Enda Hughes; Wrecked (2000), about a drunken journey home in Liverpool city centre; Gutwallops (2000), a surreal tale of family violence; and I'm A Juvenile Delinquent, Jail Me! (2004), a satire of reality television and its exploitation and sensationalising of youth culture, directed by Alex Cox.

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