Monday Nov 30 | The Sun Online
THE makers of PAUL POTTS : The Movie have been struggling to find an actor to play the mobile phone salesman-turned-opera star-until now.
Petting Zoo: Spacing out on Spaced
Ever since I can remember, I've enjoyed British comedy. Growing up, I would tune into late-night PBS for its BBC America feed.
The new rock-saturated "Pirate Radio" proves life really is better when it's set to a '60s soundtrack.
'Hot Fuzz' stars pay tribute to Woodward
Simon Pegg and Nick Frost have paid tribute to their Hot Fuzz co-star Edward Woodward on Twitter.
Starring : * Phillip Seymour Hoffman as The Count * Bill Nighy as Quentin * Rhys Ifans as Gavin * Nick Frost as Dr.
'Pirate Radio' rolls when it should rock
No movie can be all bad when juiced up with a soundtrack of more than 50 classic rock tunes.
'Pirate Radio': Adrift, By Kurt Loder
Even Philip Seymour Hoffman can't quite float this boat. Philip Seymour Hoffman and Nick Frost in "Pirate Radio" Imagine you're a British teenager in the mid-1960s. The new breed of English rock is taking over the world.
UK - Southern Softies, The Mighty Boosh, Tim Burton and More
Coming to you weekly from my vantage point in good old Blighty, ita s Slashfilm UK.
Nick Frost to star in BBC2 adaptation of Martin Amis's Money
Nick Frost will star in a BBC2 adaptation of Martin Amis's Money and Sophie Dahl will present a cookery show in the new season of programmes for early 2010.
Richard Curtis, director of "Love Actually" and writer of "Four Weddings and a Funeral," has created a movie that is purely enjoyable to watch-"Pirate Radio" The film stars Philip Seymour Hoffman as a radio DJ who, with the help of an assortment of other rock-enthusiasts with lax morals, broadcasts rock music from a station called Radio Rock on a ...
'Pirate Radio' set was one big 1960s music fest
For young actor Tom Sturridge, there was one scene in ''Pirate Radio'' that ''really, truly and absolutely involved no acting on my part whatsoever.
If you've ever rented a grotty flat, done a rubbish job or watched a lot of 90s telly and films, you'll love Spaced Few sitcoms demonstrate how to escape a teenage mugging using the power of mime, how to use "sex noise" sound effects to fool your landlady, how to profess your sorrow through the medium of a tank, or how to liberate kidnapped pets ...
Nick Frost plays a different tune on Pirate Radio
Nick Frost arrives at the 'The Boat That Rocked MARTINI World Premiere Party' held at the MARTINI Terrazza on March 23, 2009 in London, England.
Nicholas Angel and Danny Butterman have a willy fight! Hot Fuzz slash ...
Ahoy, squirts! Quint here. You might not get a HOT FUZZ sequel, but now thanks to advent of a device called Twitter you can get a peek at the creative minds behind the film as they delve into the horrific world of slash fiction.
'The Mighty Boosh' takes deadpan jokes through time and space
October 16, 2009 at 3:52 pm by Curt Holman in Comedy , Pop Culture , movies & tv , review During a tumultuous downer of a decade, it's been awfully decent of the British to deliver up so many great comedy teams to distract us from out troubles.
Nick Frost on Tintin, Paul & World's End
ComingSoon.net attended the UK press junket for Richard Curtis' Pirate Radio , at which we spoke with actor Nick Frost, who plays ultra-hip '60s DJ "Doctor Dave." During the roundtable interview, the subject of Frost's next film Paul came up.
Spaced: the epitome of referential comedy
Most filmgoers of the past six years will recognize at least one of the gentlemen best known for the subversive comedies Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz.
Pining for the golden age of the movie poster? Just make your own
The dull production-line nature of current film ads has prompted a spate of pastiches that hark back to classier times a ' and the results are as stunning as they are disorientating A design classic a The original promotional poster for North By Northwest.
The ultimate guide to zombies, Part 1
There are two schools of lumbering zombie camps out there: those who delight in zombies for the gore and destruction and those who enjoy their funnier, softer, crumbling side.
For the Twilight fans: the Olivia Munn parody
Although not about zombies, this video from the G4 channel does bring home the point that the undead are to be taken seriously.
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