The Brittany Job
Synopsis
Details
- Year
- 2006
- Type of film
- Features
- Running time
- 105 mins
- Format
- DV
- Director
-
John Sergeant
- Producer
- John Sergeant
- Editor
- John Sergeant
- Director of Photography
- John Sergeant
- Sound
- John Sergeant
- Music
- Various
- Principal cast
- Nobby Clarke, Sean McCann
Genre
Production Status
Sales Company
John Sergeant
j_sergeant@yahoo.co.uk
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See also
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Director: John Sergeant
Year: 2000
Described by The Independent as a "millennial British version of Chris Marker's Sunless", Blue Summer is an experimental film about the doomed love affair between a writer and his conceptual artist lover. An unseen narrator guides us through the story, describing how he unearthed a pile of letters and fragments of a novel in an abandoned trailer in the countryside. Slowly, these fragments come to life, revealing how the writer's paranoid fantasies provoke a psychological meltdown.<br /> <br /> Exploring a number of contemporary concerns - the media, modern art, digitalisation, modernism, ecology - the film experiments with filmic genres and uses image and sound to mirror the writer's descent into madness. Writer-director John Sergeant, who has made over 30 documentaries for both the BBC and Channel 4, shot the film over five years on a tiny budget. "I wanted to make a film on my own terms rather than going through the commissioning process, which I know can completely change a writer-director's original idea," says Sergeant. <br /> <br /> That uncompromising approach has won the film fans around the world. Following its premiere at last year's Sheffield International Documentary Festival, it was invited to London, Rotterdam, Zanzibar and Ankara, and has also enjoyed special screenings at arthouse cinemas around the UK, all as a result of word of mouth.

Director: John Sergeant
Year: 2000
Described by The Independent as a "millennial British version of Chris Marker's Sunless", Blue Summer is an experimental film about the doomed love affair between a writer and his conceptual artist lover. An unseen narrator guides us through the story, describing how he unearthed a pile of letters and fragments of a novel in an abandoned trailer in the countryside. Slowly, these fragments come to life, revealing how the writer's paranoid fantasies provoke a psychological meltdown.<br /> <br /> Exploring a number of contemporary concerns - the media, modern art, digitalisation, modernism, ecology - the film experiments with filmic genres and uses image and sound to mirror the writer's descent into madness. Writer-director John Sergeant, who has made over 30 documentaries for both the BBC and Channel 4, shot the film over five years on a tiny budget. "I wanted to make a film on my own terms rather than going through the commissioning process, which I know can completely change a writer-director's original idea," says Sergeant. "I've seen a lot of great ideas destroyed by the commissioning process and there are only a few film-makers - Adam Curtis, Patrick Keiller and Chris Petit - who manage to manipulate the system to their own advantage."<br /> <br /> That uncompromising approach has won the film fans around the world. Following its premiere at last year's Sheffield International Documentary Festival, it was invited to London, Rotterdam, Zanzibar and Ankara, and has also enjoyed special screenings at arthouse cinemas around the UK, all as a result of word of mouth.<br /> <br /> ===<br /> ***<br /> <br /> The Blue Summer is an experimental feature film about a writer's doomed attempt to understand his lover and her art via an increasingly tormented contemplation of the media, contemporary art, digitalisation, and the countryside. The writer is called Bill, the artist, Sarah.<br /> <br /> Following a title sequence suggesting some kind of crisis in the modernist dream, an offscreen, unnamed narrator describes how he once discovered a pile of letters and the remnants of a failed writing project in a derelict trailer home on the edge of a wood. The body of the film (based on several intertwined true stories and illuminated by on-screen text), comprises the carefully illustrated narration of these writings.<br /> <br /> Shot in a deliberately picture postcard style, the film is paced to try and reflect the slowly changing nature of rural time and shows off the magnificent midsummer countryside of the Welsh Marches. On occasion this material is interrupted by handheld footage of particular rural adventures and encounters, and by archive and motorway-based daydreams or reveries.<br /> <br /> By the last stages of the film the divisions between the various types of reality contemplated by Bill the writer are collapsing. Sections repeat, get in the wrong order, and following his bad news from Sarah, get apocalyptically crazy. In the last scene in the country therefore, the wild Lear-type storm is as much digital as it is 'natural', and a wild meander through a rain storm ends in an apparent suicide attempt in the nearby river.

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Year: 2025
An emotionally charged sports drama following Grazyna "The Tramp" Jarzynowska, a British-Polish MMA fighter whose meteoric rise is abruptly halted by an unexpected pregnancy.