Martin Clunes & Louis Ashbourne Serkis Land ITV Drama
Martin Clunes has landed his next ITV drama, playing a farmer confronted with dark forces seeping into his rural community opposite Andy Serkis’s son. Out There will depict the stealthy, surreptitious invasion of the land Nathan Williams cherishes, with devastating consequences as his livelihood, homestead and family life are threatened by local county lines drugs dealers. The show also starring Louis Ashbourne Serkis as Nathan’s son Johnny is being penned by Ed Whitmore and Marc Evans and produced by Doc Martin star Clune’s Buffalo Pictures, which he runs with Philippa Braithwaite. “Out There couldn’t be more different from Doc Martin” he said. “It’s pretty dark, but definitely a story worth telling.” Clunes also worked with Evans and Whitmore on hit ITV drama Manhunt.
BBC Policy Boss Scores Premier League Role
The BBC’s policy boss Claire Sumner...
Martin Clunes has landed his next ITV drama, playing a farmer confronted with dark forces seeping into his rural community opposite Andy Serkis’s son. Out There will depict the stealthy, surreptitious invasion of the land Nathan Williams cherishes, with devastating consequences as his livelihood, homestead and family life are threatened by local county lines drugs dealers. The show also starring Louis Ashbourne Serkis as Nathan’s son Johnny is being penned by Ed Whitmore and Marc Evans and produced by Doc Martin star Clune’s Buffalo Pictures, which he runs with Philippa Braithwaite. “Out There couldn’t be more different from Doc Martin” he said. “It’s pretty dark, but definitely a story worth telling.” Clunes also worked with Evans and Whitmore on hit ITV drama Manhunt.
BBC Policy Boss Scores Premier League Role
The BBC’s policy boss Claire Sumner...
- 9/14/2023
- by Max Goldbart
- Deadline Film + TV
It was 2004 and Martin Clunes was ready for a change. As the star of riotous Nineties sitcom Men Behaving Badly, he was still widely regarded as the face of floppy-fringed, shirt-hanging-out lad culture. But Clunes was eager to show a different side: to prove he could do serious as well as frothy. At which point Dr Martin Ellingham, an emotionally repressed small-town Gp with a tight smile and a big heart, walked into his life. Doc Martin had entered the building.
“It was a leap,” Clunes would reflect of the character he has portrayed for the past 18 years and to whom he says farewell with a Christmas special on ITV tonight (the series proper having wrapped in October). “I need something to act, someone to act, or something to pin someone on, rather than just open a script and a nice guy says some kind of nice things.”
Doc Martin,...
“It was a leap,” Clunes would reflect of the character he has portrayed for the past 18 years and to whom he says farewell with a Christmas special on ITV tonight (the series proper having wrapped in October). “I need something to act, someone to act, or something to pin someone on, rather than just open a script and a nice guy says some kind of nice things.”
Doc Martin,...
- 12/25/2022
- by Ed Power
- The Independent - TV
‘Landscapers’ earned seven nominations, whilst Help and ’Time’ received six.
Russel T Davies’ It’s A Sin leads the nominations for this year’s Bafta Television and Bafta Craft awards.
The drama, produced by Red Production Company for UK broadcaster Channel 4, earned 11 nominations, including mini-series, leading actor for Olly Alexander, actress for Lydia West, director: fiction for Peter Hoar, writer: drama for Davies and three supporting actor nods for Callum Scott Howells, David Carlyle and Omari Douglas.
Drama Landscapers, produced by Sister for Sky Atlantic, earned seven nominations including mini-series and leading actor for David Thewlis.
Jack Thorne’s...
Russel T Davies’ It’s A Sin leads the nominations for this year’s Bafta Television and Bafta Craft awards.
The drama, produced by Red Production Company for UK broadcaster Channel 4, earned 11 nominations, including mini-series, leading actor for Olly Alexander, actress for Lydia West, director: fiction for Peter Hoar, writer: drama for Davies and three supporting actor nods for Callum Scott Howells, David Carlyle and Omari Douglas.
Drama Landscapers, produced by Sister for Sky Atlantic, earned seven nominations including mini-series and leading actor for David Thewlis.
Jack Thorne’s...
- 3/30/2022
- by Orlando Parfitt
- ScreenDaily
‘Landscapers’ earned seven nominations, whilst Help and ’Time’ received six.
Russel T Davies’ It’s A Sin leads the nominations for this year’s Bafta Television and Bafta Craft awards.
The drama, produced by Red Production Company for UK broadcaster Channel 4, earned 11 nominations, including mini-series, leading actor for Olly Alexander, actress for Lydia West, director: fiction for Peter Hoar, writer: drama for Davies and three supporting actor nods for Callum Scott Howells, David Carlyle and Omari Douglas.
Drama Landscapers, produced by Sister for Sky Atlantic, earned seven nominations including mini-series and leading actor for David Thewlis.
Jack Thorne’s...
Russel T Davies’ It’s A Sin leads the nominations for this year’s Bafta Television and Bafta Craft awards.
The drama, produced by Red Production Company for UK broadcaster Channel 4, earned 11 nominations, including mini-series, leading actor for Olly Alexander, actress for Lydia West, director: fiction for Peter Hoar, writer: drama for Davies and three supporting actor nods for Callum Scott Howells, David Carlyle and Omari Douglas.
Drama Landscapers, produced by Sister for Sky Atlantic, earned seven nominations including mini-series and leading actor for David Thewlis.
Jack Thorne’s...
- 3/30/2022
- by Orlando Parfitt
- ScreenDaily
Russell T. Davies’ Channel 4 series “It’s a Sin” led the field at the Virgin Media British Academy Television Awards and the British Academy Television Craft Awards with 11 nominations, while Will Sharpe’s Sky show “Landscapers” followed with seven. Both shows stream in the U.S. on HBO Max.
Nominations for “It’s A Sin” include for Director: Fiction, Editing Fiction, Make-up & Hair Design, Scripted Casting, Writer Drama, Leading Actor, Leading Actress, Mini-Series and Supporting Actor, while “Landscapers” scored in the Director: Fiction, Editing Fiction, Original Music, Photography & Lighting Fiction, Production Design, Leading Actor and Mini-Series categories.
The international category nominees feature a roster of global heavy hitters including “Call My Agent!,” “Lupin,” “Succession,” “Squid Game,” “Mare of Easttown” and “The Underground Railroad.”
The British Academy Television Craft Awards will take place on Apr. 24 and the Television Awards on May 8.
British Academy Television Awards Nominees
Comedy Entertainment Program
“The Graham Norton Show” – Graham Norton,...
Nominations for “It’s A Sin” include for Director: Fiction, Editing Fiction, Make-up & Hair Design, Scripted Casting, Writer Drama, Leading Actor, Leading Actress, Mini-Series and Supporting Actor, while “Landscapers” scored in the Director: Fiction, Editing Fiction, Original Music, Photography & Lighting Fiction, Production Design, Leading Actor and Mini-Series categories.
The international category nominees feature a roster of global heavy hitters including “Call My Agent!,” “Lupin,” “Succession,” “Squid Game,” “Mare of Easttown” and “The Underground Railroad.”
The British Academy Television Craft Awards will take place on Apr. 24 and the Television Awards on May 8.
British Academy Television Awards Nominees
Comedy Entertainment Program
“The Graham Norton Show” – Graham Norton,...
- 3/30/2022
- by Naman Ramachandran
- Variety Film + TV
Russell T Davies’ It’s a Sin and Jack Thorne’s Help, two hard-hitting Channel 4 shows about societal issues, have dominated this year’s BAFTA TV Awards nominations, taking six and four noms, respectively.
Incorporating BAFTA Craft noms, which run concurrently with the TV Awards, HBO Max co-production It’s a Sin picked up 11, including for Mini-Series, Writer (Davies), five actors and in the Virgin Must-See Moment for Colin’s diagnosis.
Davies’ heart-wrenching semi-biographical portrayal of the UK’s 1980s AIDS epidemic for Red Production Company has swept up at this year’s awards ceremonies and is fresh off the back of three wins at last night’s Rts Awards and two at the Bpg Awards.
It’s a Sin’s five performance category noms were joint with last year’s Small Axe...
Incorporating BAFTA Craft noms, which run concurrently with the TV Awards, HBO Max co-production It’s a Sin picked up 11, including for Mini-Series, Writer (Davies), five actors and in the Virgin Must-See Moment for Colin’s diagnosis.
Davies’ heart-wrenching semi-biographical portrayal of the UK’s 1980s AIDS epidemic for Red Production Company has swept up at this year’s awards ceremonies and is fresh off the back of three wins at last night’s Rts Awards and two at the Bpg Awards.
It’s a Sin’s five performance category noms were joint with last year’s Small Axe...
- 3/30/2022
- by Max Goldbart
- Deadline Film + TV
Doc Martin, starring Martin Clunes as the grumpy British doctor, is to hang up his stethoscope next year with the tenth and final season of the UK drama.
ITV has renewed the series, which airs on Acorn TV in the U.S., for a final run with production set to start in 2021.
The show follows Clunes’ Dr. Martin Ellingham, a Gp with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood who lives in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall.
The cast also features Caroline Catz playing Doc Martin’s wife, Louisa Ellingham; Dame Eileen Atkins, who plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth; Ian McNeice’s local businessman Bert Large, with Joe Absolom as his son, Al; John Marquez is PC Joe Penhale; Jessica Ransom is the doctor’s receptionist Morwenna Newcross; and Selina Cadell is pharmacist Mrs Tishell.
Created by Dominic Minghella, Doc Martin has been on...
ITV has renewed the series, which airs on Acorn TV in the U.S., for a final run with production set to start in 2021.
The show follows Clunes’ Dr. Martin Ellingham, a Gp with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood who lives in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall.
The cast also features Caroline Catz playing Doc Martin’s wife, Louisa Ellingham; Dame Eileen Atkins, who plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth; Ian McNeice’s local businessman Bert Large, with Joe Absolom as his son, Al; John Marquez is PC Joe Penhale; Jessica Ransom is the doctor’s receptionist Morwenna Newcross; and Selina Cadell is pharmacist Mrs Tishell.
Created by Dominic Minghella, Doc Martin has been on...
- 9/7/2020
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Martin Clunes has returned to Cornwall to shoot season nine of medical drama Doc Martin.
Filming for the ninth season of the drama, which airs on ITV in the UK and Acorn TV in the U.S., has begun with Clunes returning as Dr. Martin Ellingham, the Gp with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood.
Set in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall, the show has been commissioned for an eight-episode run.
The regular cast returns with Caroline Catz playing Doc Martin’s wife, Louisa Ellingham, who has resigned from her job as headmistress at the local school to pursue a new career in child counselling. Dame Eileen Atkins plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth, Ian McNeice is back to play Bert Large, with Joe Absolom as his son Al. John Marquez is PC Joe Penhale, Jessica Ransom is the doctor’s receptionist Morwenna Newcross...
Filming for the ninth season of the drama, which airs on ITV in the UK and Acorn TV in the U.S., has begun with Clunes returning as Dr. Martin Ellingham, the Gp with a brusque bedside manner and a phobia of blood.
Set in the idyllic hamlet of Portwenn in Cornwall, the show has been commissioned for an eight-episode run.
The regular cast returns with Caroline Catz playing Doc Martin’s wife, Louisa Ellingham, who has resigned from her job as headmistress at the local school to pursue a new career in child counselling. Dame Eileen Atkins plays Doc Martin’s formidable Aunt Ruth, Ian McNeice is back to play Bert Large, with Joe Absolom as his son Al. John Marquez is PC Joe Penhale, Jessica Ransom is the doctor’s receptionist Morwenna Newcross...
- 3/25/2019
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
British crime drama Manhunt, starring Doc Martin’s Martin Clunes, has become ITV’s highest rated new drama since the launch of Broadchurch in 2013. Is it this year’s Bodyguard?
The drama, which is produced by Buffalo Pictures and written by Ed Whitmore (Silent Witness), averaged 8.7M viewers across its three episodes, according to ITV, rising to 9M when online viewing was included. Growing from an overnight average of 6M, the catch up figures mean the show has become the most watched program of 2019 so far.
To put that into context, Bodyguard, the smash hit of 2018, opened with 6.7M live viewers with the first episode adding over 3M viewers to 10.4M after on-demand and catch-up viewers were added, making it the biggest new drama launch in the UK in ten years.
The show, which was picked up by streaming service Acorn in the U.S., stars Clunes as Detective Colin Sutton,...
The drama, which is produced by Buffalo Pictures and written by Ed Whitmore (Silent Witness), averaged 8.7M viewers across its three episodes, according to ITV, rising to 9M when online viewing was included. Growing from an overnight average of 6M, the catch up figures mean the show has become the most watched program of 2019 so far.
To put that into context, Bodyguard, the smash hit of 2018, opened with 6.7M live viewers with the first episode adding over 3M viewers to 10.4M after on-demand and catch-up viewers were added, making it the biggest new drama launch in the UK in ten years.
The show, which was picked up by streaming service Acorn in the U.S., stars Clunes as Detective Colin Sutton,...
- 1/17/2019
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Acorn TV has acquired a pair of Martin Clunes-fronted titles including true crime drama Manhunt.
The Svod service has acquired ITV drama Manhunt, which stars Doc Martin’s Clunes as Detective Colin Sutton, the police officer who tenaciously pursued British serial killer Levi Bellfield.
The series, which is produced by Buffalo Pictures and written by Ed Whitmore (Silent Witness), has been picked up from distributor Drg and Acorn TV has taken exclusive North and South American rights.
The drama is the real life story of how the 2004 murder of French National Amelie Delagrange was eventually linked to the murders of Marsha McDonnell in 2003 and the abduction and murder of Milly Dowler as she travelled home from school in 2002. Sutton dedicated himself to finding Delagrange’s killer. With very little evidence, his painstaking approach and the diligence of his fellow officers gradually led to breakthroughs in the case. Manhunt will...
The Svod service has acquired ITV drama Manhunt, which stars Doc Martin’s Clunes as Detective Colin Sutton, the police officer who tenaciously pursued British serial killer Levi Bellfield.
The series, which is produced by Buffalo Pictures and written by Ed Whitmore (Silent Witness), has been picked up from distributor Drg and Acorn TV has taken exclusive North and South American rights.
The drama is the real life story of how the 2004 murder of French National Amelie Delagrange was eventually linked to the murders of Marsha McDonnell in 2003 and the abduction and murder of Milly Dowler as she travelled home from school in 2002. Sutton dedicated himself to finding Delagrange’s killer. With very little evidence, his painstaking approach and the diligence of his fellow officers gradually led to breakthroughs in the case. Manhunt will...
- 11/27/2018
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Martin Clunes gave his wife real-life medical advice thanks to his role in 'Doc Martin'. The 51-year-old actor says the years spent playing grumpy doctor Martin Ellingham on the ITV drama have been well served after he recently stopped his wife Philippa Braithwaite from having a pointless operation thanks to his medical knowledge. He told Reader's Digest magazine: ''She had an infection in her gall bladder and the surgeon was minded to take out her appendix. There was no infection in her appendix and instinct told me that it would be the wrong thing to do. ''So I took her home instead and...
- 8/15/2013
- Virgin Media - TV
ITV has commissioned a fourth series of Martin Clunes's drama Doc Martin. The broadcaster has ordered a new eight-part run of the show, which features Clunes as a grumpy doctor, to be filmed in Cornwall by Buffalo Pictures. "We are delighted to be returning to Cornwall to make this fourth series. There are plenty of surprises in store for the Doc, and compelling story lines," said producer Philippa Braithwaite. (more)...
- 2/11/2009
- by By Lara Martin
- Digital Spy
Martin Clunes has revealed that he couldn't be happier after leaving London for a new start in the country. The actor and his wife Philippa Braithwaite, a TV producer, have settled on a farm in Dorset with their eight-year-old daughter Emily. They both credit the move as one of the best they have ever made. "I'm over London now and I don't miss it in the slightest," Clunes told The Mirror. "It's a million miles away from the life I live now. Parenthood changes everything. I have to be in bed nowadays or I'm in trouble. In some ways I feel like I was a different person in my London days. "Spool back to the late 90s and you'd (more)...
- 8/23/2008
- by By Daniel Kilkelly
- Digital Spy
SALT LAKE CITY -- The Brits always have been sensitive to the importance trains play in love -- "Brief Encounter", to recall the best -- and, once again, it's a train trip that catalyzes romance, or at least charts how differently things might turn out for a young woman if she misses a train rather than catches it.
A splendidly updated, old-fashioned romancer, "Sliding Doors" was the perfect tonic for opening night at the Sundance Film Festival. With Gwyneth Paltrow dishing up easily her most sympathetic performance, this Miramax and Paramount presentation should delight young adult audiences with its spritzy comedy and certainly engage mature viewers with its identifiable romantic woes.
We've all considered how different our lives might be if some happenstance hadn't propelled or jarred them along certain paths: How a future mate was met by some fluke of chance, for instance, or how a career was born out of a fortuitous occurrence -- that sort of thing.
In this smartly balmy case, writer-director Peter Howitt charts two very divergent directions that 20ish PR executive Helen's (Paltrow) life will take following a simple decision of whether to get on a train. In this smart scenario, it is, perhaps, the worst day of Helen's adult life -- she has been peremptorily fired from her job and her live-in boyfriend is discovered with his ex-girlfriend (Jeanne Tripplehorn). By the uncanny plot device of either catching or missing the train back to their flat, Howitt charts the two divergent paths down which this situation could propel her.
Admittedly, anyone who walks into this movie five minutes late will think it's some sort of Godard jumble of disconnected cross-cuts, as the story steps back and forth between two very different scenarios, namely: 1) Helen catches the train, meets a debonair fellow traveler (John Hannah) and gets home to discover the truth of her beau's infidelity; and, 2) she misses the train, doesn't connect with the dashing chap and arrives too late to discover her boyfriend's cheating.
In short, is Helen better off for finding out that she's involved with a cheating chap, or is her life qualitatively better by living a lie? Those are the essential questions to this touching conundrum, and Howitt's storytelling is an illuminating portrait of the many sides of this situation. Is ignorance bliss? Sometimes. Is knowing the truth comforting? Not always.
The narrative flip-floppery sometimes stumbles, but the cross-connected story lines cast a wide eye on the delicacy of modern-day romance, portraying the pains, slights, joys and the crazy wonder of it all. Laced with keen insights and graced with kindly wit, "Sliding Doors" is an effervescent and nimble treat, owing mainly to Howitt's spry, wise storytelling.
At times, we must admit, the yarn goes into a saccharine, girl-gonna-make-it-after-all lump -- as if an old "Mary Tyler Moore" episode leapt into the fray. Grousing aside, the story's smarts and overall drollery win the day.
Paltrow's a pleasant surprise for those of us usually unmoved by her hoity-toity, porcelain performances. As Helen, she's captivating, engaging and full of everyday mettle. That we care for this girl is what makes the film sparkle. As her scintillating suitor, Hannah brims with appealing delight. He's a refreshingly dashing chap in these sullen cinematic times. Other portrayals are, similarly, top-drawer. John Lynch captures perfectly the user aspects of Helen's wayward boyfriend, while Tripplehorn is well-cast as the appetitive and no-nonsense "other woman."
Technical contributions are a mix of goop and polish: Musically, David Hirschfelder's playful score is a detraction in its sitcom-lite obviousness, while cinematographer Maria Djurkovic's shiny sheens add a fitting sparkle and clarity to these "Sliding Doors".
SLIDING DOORS
Miramax Films
Miramax Films and Paramount Pictures present
in association with Intermedia Films
A Mirage production, a Peter Howitt film
Producers: Sydney Pollack,
Philippa Braithwaite, William Horberg
Screenwriter-director: Peter Howitt
Executive producers: Guy East, Nigel Sinclair
Director of photography: Remi Aderarasin
Production designer: Maria Djurkovic
Music: David Hirschfelder
Editor: John Smith
Costume designer: Jill Taylor
Casting: Michelle Guish
Color/stereo
Cast:
Helen: Gwyneth Paltrow
James: John Hannah
Gerry: John Lynch
Lydia: Jeanne Tripplehorn
Anna: Zara Turner
Russell: Douglas McFerran
Clive: Paul Brightwell
Running time -- 97 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
A splendidly updated, old-fashioned romancer, "Sliding Doors" was the perfect tonic for opening night at the Sundance Film Festival. With Gwyneth Paltrow dishing up easily her most sympathetic performance, this Miramax and Paramount presentation should delight young adult audiences with its spritzy comedy and certainly engage mature viewers with its identifiable romantic woes.
We've all considered how different our lives might be if some happenstance hadn't propelled or jarred them along certain paths: How a future mate was met by some fluke of chance, for instance, or how a career was born out of a fortuitous occurrence -- that sort of thing.
In this smartly balmy case, writer-director Peter Howitt charts two very divergent directions that 20ish PR executive Helen's (Paltrow) life will take following a simple decision of whether to get on a train. In this smart scenario, it is, perhaps, the worst day of Helen's adult life -- she has been peremptorily fired from her job and her live-in boyfriend is discovered with his ex-girlfriend (Jeanne Tripplehorn). By the uncanny plot device of either catching or missing the train back to their flat, Howitt charts the two divergent paths down which this situation could propel her.
Admittedly, anyone who walks into this movie five minutes late will think it's some sort of Godard jumble of disconnected cross-cuts, as the story steps back and forth between two very different scenarios, namely: 1) Helen catches the train, meets a debonair fellow traveler (John Hannah) and gets home to discover the truth of her beau's infidelity; and, 2) she misses the train, doesn't connect with the dashing chap and arrives too late to discover her boyfriend's cheating.
In short, is Helen better off for finding out that she's involved with a cheating chap, or is her life qualitatively better by living a lie? Those are the essential questions to this touching conundrum, and Howitt's storytelling is an illuminating portrait of the many sides of this situation. Is ignorance bliss? Sometimes. Is knowing the truth comforting? Not always.
The narrative flip-floppery sometimes stumbles, but the cross-connected story lines cast a wide eye on the delicacy of modern-day romance, portraying the pains, slights, joys and the crazy wonder of it all. Laced with keen insights and graced with kindly wit, "Sliding Doors" is an effervescent and nimble treat, owing mainly to Howitt's spry, wise storytelling.
At times, we must admit, the yarn goes into a saccharine, girl-gonna-make-it-after-all lump -- as if an old "Mary Tyler Moore" episode leapt into the fray. Grousing aside, the story's smarts and overall drollery win the day.
Paltrow's a pleasant surprise for those of us usually unmoved by her hoity-toity, porcelain performances. As Helen, she's captivating, engaging and full of everyday mettle. That we care for this girl is what makes the film sparkle. As her scintillating suitor, Hannah brims with appealing delight. He's a refreshingly dashing chap in these sullen cinematic times. Other portrayals are, similarly, top-drawer. John Lynch captures perfectly the user aspects of Helen's wayward boyfriend, while Tripplehorn is well-cast as the appetitive and no-nonsense "other woman."
Technical contributions are a mix of goop and polish: Musically, David Hirschfelder's playful score is a detraction in its sitcom-lite obviousness, while cinematographer Maria Djurkovic's shiny sheens add a fitting sparkle and clarity to these "Sliding Doors".
SLIDING DOORS
Miramax Films
Miramax Films and Paramount Pictures present
in association with Intermedia Films
A Mirage production, a Peter Howitt film
Producers: Sydney Pollack,
Philippa Braithwaite, William Horberg
Screenwriter-director: Peter Howitt
Executive producers: Guy East, Nigel Sinclair
Director of photography: Remi Aderarasin
Production designer: Maria Djurkovic
Music: David Hirschfelder
Editor: John Smith
Costume designer: Jill Taylor
Casting: Michelle Guish
Color/stereo
Cast:
Helen: Gwyneth Paltrow
James: John Hannah
Gerry: John Lynch
Lydia: Jeanne Tripplehorn
Anna: Zara Turner
Russell: Douglas McFerran
Clive: Paul Brightwell
Running time -- 97 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
- 1/16/1998
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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