Gareth Edwards came out of nowhere with Monsters. Released in late 2010 after touring the festival circuit, it was truly guerilla filmmaking, made for less than half a
The bold and vibrant career of Ronald D Moore has largely been built upon television shows originally devised by others, as a staff writer on Star Trek The
It was the somewhat dreary morning of Friday 22nd August when Ned Beauman visited the Spiegeltent of the 2014 Edinburgh International Book Festival to discuss Glow, the followup
It begins with The Thief and the Last Battle, a misdirection from the opening chapter which lays the groundwork for what is to come. After two books of
It begins in a classroom, what should be a benign place of safety yet is anything but, the students marshalled by armed soldiers. Strapped to her chair, Melanie
Luc Besson, a director known in equal measures for his genius and notoriety, has been around for a long time. His influence on the last twenty five years
Half a century is an incredibly long time in television terms. When many shows fail to even have their pilot episode broadcast or struggle to be granted a
Recently announced to direct the big screen adaptation of Marvel’s Doctor Strange, the career of Scott Derrickson can most kindly be described as erratic. There was little positive
Robin Wright had it all; a movie queen at twenty four through her role as Buttercup in The Princess Bride, now her long suffering agent Al (Harvey Keitel)