London Unplugged

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Directed by
Written by
  • Nicholas Cohen (contributing writer)
  • Nick Hopkins (contributing writer)
Story by
  • Nicholas Cohen
  • Andres Heger-Bratterud
  • George Taylor
  • Rosanna Lowe
  • David Cohen
  • Ryan Child
  • Mitchell Crawford
  • Andrew Cryan
  • Jane Kinnonmont
Produced by
  • David Cohen (executive producer)
  • Nicholas Cohen (producer)
  • Emma Castagno (associate producer)
  • Kotryna Sniukaite (associate producer)
  • Lyn Turner (co-producer)
  • Nick Hopkins (co-producer)
London Unplugged
Directed by
Written by
  • Nicholas Cohen (contributing writer)
  • Nick Hopkins (contributing writer)
Story by
  • Nicholas Cohen
  • Andres Heger-Bratterud
  • George Taylor
  • Rosanna Lowe
  • David Cohen
  • Ryan Child
  • Mitchell Crawford
  • Andrew Cryan
  • Jane Kinnonmont
Produced by
  • David Cohen (executive producer)
  • Nicholas Cohen (producer)
  • Emma Castagno (associate producer)
  • Kotryna Sniukaite (associate producer)
  • Lyn Turner (co-producer)
  • Nick Hopkins (co-producer)
Starring
Cinematography
  • Ben Baily
  • David Cinzi
  • Nick Cooke
  • Donny Johnson
  • Sam Care
  • David Carr-Brown
  • Irene Gomez-Emilsson
  • Anais Lorie
  • Nicholas Nazari
  • Poom Saiyavath
  • Simon Walton
  • Timothy Hallam Wood
Edited by
  • Ben Nash
  • James Dingle (online editor)
Music byJohnny De'ath
Production
company
  • Psychology News Production
Distributed byMunro Films
Release dates
  • April 2018 (2018-04) (East End Film Festival)[1]
  • 18 January 2019 (2019-01-18)
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

London Unplugged is a 2018 British drama anthology film that premiered at the East End Film Festival.[2] The film consists of several segments directed by numerous directors and stars Juliet Stevenson, Poppy Miller, Imogen Stubbs, Ivanno Jeremiah, Ricky Nixon and Bruce Payne.

A portmanteau exploration of disparate characters scattered across London, many of whose lives intersect unpredictably, showing the complexities, contradictions and compromises of modern living in the city of London. The film focuses on female empowerment[3]

London Unplugged centres on an interlinking device of a real-life female athlete, Yourlance Richards, who runs from Stratford in East London all the way to Kew Gardens in West London, visiting many of the locations that feature in the individual segments, which are as follows:

  1. "Dog Days"
  2. "Felines"
  3. "Club Drunk"
  4. "Unchosen"
  5. "Pictures"
  6. "Little Sarah's Big Adventure"
  7. "Mudan Blossoms"
  8. "Shopping"
  9. "The Door To"
  10. "Kew Gardens"[4]

The final segment is an adaptation of Virginia Woolf's short story "Kew Gardens".[5]

During the making of the film, a number of interlinking devices were filmed and trialled by supervising director Nicholas Cohen, before settling on Yourlance Richard's run across London. These included: short documentaries about Londoners of different ages and backgrounds, a thread following the work of a London Hackney cab driver and a selection of London archive material set to music. Ultimately, the story of a female athlete running the length of London was felt to be the strongest metaphor for the universal struggle of London living, revealing the scale of the city to a pedestrian and examining the typical Londoner's need to escape from their familiar corner of the city, the common London life as a "postcode prisoner". Both Yourlance Richards herself and her run, proved popular with press and public.

Cast

Production

The film was made by emerging London filmmakers originating from a core of graduating students from the London Film School and in conjunction with community groups, such as Four Corners Film in Bethnal Green, the Refugee Journalism Project and the Migrant Resource Centre.[6]

Release

The film premiered at the East End Film Festival in 2018. It opened in cinemas in January 2019. A screening at the Peckhamplex in London on 18 January 2019 was followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers. London Unplugged went on to have a limited theatrical release with Everyman Cinemas and the ICA Cinema until May 2019, selling out in advance at all Q&A screenings. The film also played regionally in cinemas in Broadstairs, Norwich and Orkney, among other places. UK DVD release was handled by Lionsgate UK, international by Gravitas Films in the USA.[citation needed]

Reception

References

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