Olivia Colman and Sherlock win at Royal Television Society awards

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Olivia Colman has been named best actress at this year’s Royal Television Society awards.

Colman beat Sheridan Smith and Anne Marie Duff to win the actress prize for her part in Accused II on BBC1.

Overall, the BBC won 18 prizes out of 28 at the event, which was held last night at Grosvenor Hotel.

Sean Bean, who was also in Accused II, won the best actor award, taking the prize over Lennie James and Oliver Lansley.

At the ceremony, BBC1’s Sherlock won the drama series category, beating Call the Midwife and Line of Duty, while its writer, Steven Moffat, won the writer section.

Good Cop, also on BBC1, took the drama serial award and The Hollow Crown, shown on BBC2, was named best single drama.

Coronation Street took the prize for best soap over EastEnders and Hollyoaks and CBBC series Wolfblood took the children’s drama prize, beating Mr Stink, shown on BBC1, and S4C’s Teulu Ty Crwn.

Other winners included Jessica Hynes, who won the comedy performance section for Twenty Twelve, beating Ruth Jones and Jack Whitehall.

However, Twenty Twelve lost out in the scripted comedy category, with Alan Partridge – Welcome to the Places of My Life winning the award. It also beat Channel 4’s Fresh Meat.

The award for best comedy writer, meanwhile, went to the writing team of The Thick of It, shown on BBC2.

Celebrity Juice, shown on ITV2, triumphed in the entertainment category, taking the prize over Britain’s Got Talent and Dynamo – Magician Impossible.

Danny Boyle was also honoured at the awards for his work on the opening ceremony of the Olympics.

The RTS Programme Awards honour excellence in “key genres of television programming”.

Source: thestage.co.uk – Olivia Colman and Sherlock win at Royal Television Society awards

Is Olivia Colman Britain’s most versatile actress?

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Olivia Colman has the fear – the one actors get when they don’t have another job lined up. “Maybe I’ve had a good run of it and now it’s all going to stop,” she says. Right now such a dismal outcome is highly unlikely, as Colman seems to be everywhere – as Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) visiting Bill Murray’s Franklin D Roosevelt in Hyde Park on Hudson, as a foul-mouthed marriage counsellor in the British rom-com I Give It a Year, and as Nick Frost’s sister in the eagerly anticipated dance comedy Cuban Fury.

Also in the wings are a guest turn in the wonderful Sky Atlantic comedy This Is Jinsy and a new series of BBC2’s dog-collar sitcom Rev, while for the next eight weeks she is going to be sharing top-billing with David Tennant in the ITV whodunit Broadchurch – a sort of British The Killing about the murder of a boy from a close-knit Dorset seaside town.

“The Killing was so brilliant that it seems a bit up yourself to say this is ‘the British Killing’,” says Colman, characteristically averse to hyperbole. She plays a local police detective miffed when an abrasive outsider (David Tennant, giving good stubble) is parachuted in to lead the investigation, while an all-star cast of suspects (Andrew Buchan, Jodie Whittaker, Vicky McClure and Doctor Who’s Arthur Darvill) slowly reveal theirf secrets. Colman’s is a very personable breed of copper (Scott & Bailey are a pair of Dirty Harriets in comparison), which is hardly surprising since she’s modelled on herself. “I wanted it to be me in the police force,” she says. “I thought I could damage that by doing too much research, which is my lazy way of saying ‘I couldn’t be bothered’.”

Take that with enough salt to grit Heathrow airport, for the rise and rise of Olivia Colman is about unassuming hard work as well as talent, intelligence and (never a quality to be underestimated in her profession) likeability. Her success is certainly nothing to do with being brazen or pushy – she positively blushed with self-consciousness on our two, albeit brief, prior meetings (on the sets of Broadchurch and This Is Jinsy). Today however she’s more relaxed, perhaps because it’s her 39th birthday, and also maybe because the ice had been broken with a discussion about the attractions of her native north Norfolk.

There’s no East Anglian accent; in fact her voice reminded me of a softer version of Rising Damp’s Frances de la Tour – Miss Jones’s gentler, more diffident younger sister perhaps. And like another shy comedy actress, Hunderby’s Julia Davis, she has a dazzling smile that seems designed to deflect the inane intrusions of journalists and other idiots. “Perish the thought,” she says when I ask whether she has a Hollywood agent, and she describes herself as “not terribly thick-skinned”, when explaining why she doesn’t tweet and why she keeps “my head down” in public. What do people say when they do recognise her? “They shout Peep Show,” she says, mimicking a drunken cockney. “I’m not sure what I’m supposed to say in response.”

In a way these boors are right – it was Peep Show that first made Colman. In Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong’s brilliant (and brilliantly sustained) Channel 4 sitcom, she played Sophie, the endlessly forgiving girlfriend of the appalling Mark (David Mitchell). “I couldn’t do the latest series because I was doing Broadchurch,” says Colman. “But also from a story point of view I don’t think Sophie was as interesting for people to watch any more. And Dobby (played by Isy Suttie) is such a brilliant character and it’s more fun to watch Mark fuck it up with other people.”

Also, she might add, in recent years she has had to make the conscious decision to distance herself from her co-stars, David Mitchell and Robert Webb, whom she first met in Cambridge. “That was the discussion I had with my agent,” says Colman. “She said, ‘I know you love them and I know you’re probably going to cry but you need to decide what you’re going to do’. And Rob and David were heavenly about it. I’m so grateful for them – they were my first job and without them, well, I could be one of my many mates who doesn’t get much work. But it’s their show – it’s Mitchell and Webb, not Mitchell and Webb and Colman. So Lindy [King – her agent] was right and it’s all worked out.”

It has indeed, starting with Tyrannosaur, the directorial debut of actor (and Colman’s friend) Paddy Considine, with whom she had starred in Shane Meadows’ mock documentary Le Donk & Scor-zay-zee, and with whom she has just finished filming an upcoming episode of the ITV period crime drama, The Suspicions of Mr Whicher. Colman’s performance in Tyrannosaur, as a charity shop worker enduring hidden domestic violence and further challenged by Peter Mullan’s raging alcoholic, was a revelation, and won several awards, including the Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

“It changed everything, really,” she says. “It’s funny… I’ve always done bits of drama, but clearly nothing anyone had ever seen.” Next came her Carol Thatcher in Abi Morgan’s misjudged Margaret Thatcher biopic, The Iron Lady, being singled out in Meryl Streep’s Bafta acceptance speech for being “divinely gifted”. Colman’s research involved watching tapes of Carol in the 2005 series of I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!. “It was such a godsend being able to watch the person you’re trying to emulate in that situation,” she says. “It was her being herself. Anyway, I thought she was amazing; if I was stuck in a forest I’d want her with me.”

Colman was born in north Norfolk in 1974, the year before Margaret Thatcher became leader of the Conservative Party. She had an “absolutely heavenly” childhood moving around the county as her father, a surveyor, and mother, a nurse, renovated houses. “I had a lovely, feral, free childhood – out and then come back when you’re hungry or it gets too dark,” she says. “I feel slightly cruel that I’m not offering my children the same.” The children are her two sons, Finn, aged seven, and Hal, five, with her husband, writer Ed Sinclair – but more of them later.

Colman didn’t discover acting until she went as a sixth-former to the independent girls’ school Gresham’s in Holt, but the idea that you could make a living from this new-found passion never crossed her mind. “I’m the only weirdo in the family who’s gone into it,” she says. f “My older brother, who was in the Army, now owns his own building company. My half-sister was a nurse and is now a psychotherapist.”

Instead she went to teacher-training college in Cambridge, but left after a year (“I was rubbish… a generation of children have had a very lucky break”), but not before that fateful meeting with Mitchell and Webb when she attended an audition for the Cambridge University Footlights under the mistaken impression that it was a straight drama society. “I’d never heard of Footlights,” she says. “I think Rob and David probably thought I was quite game because they said, ‘Find something in here and try and sell it to us’, and I picked up a cigarette butt and was trying to sell it to them as nutritious and then ate it. Instead of laughing they just looked slightly shocked.”

Another long-standing relationship that began at Footlights was with her future husband, Ed. “We did a play together,” she recalls. “He did a play because he fancied the director and I did it because she was a friend of mine, and then I turned up and said (in a breathy voice now very much like Miss Jones in Rising Damp), ‘Oh, he’s amaaazing…’. And luckily the director… she wasn’t that interested in him… thankfully… so, erm, then he got into drama school [the Bristol Old Vic] when he graduated and I was heart-broken that it would all end there. So I said I’d come along and I could support him.”

A determined suitor, I suggest. “Yuh,” agrees Colman, who thought that drama school looked like so much fun that she herself applied. She and Ed got married seven years later (“He’s a steady chap… he likes to be sure”), although Ed has given up acting for writing. “I’ve got so many friends who just aren’t working, it’s puzzling; I’ve no idea why,” says Colman. “And for Ed the work just stopped. But actually for him I think he was quite relieved because he always wanted to write and he’s brilliant at it. I was lucky enough to pay the rent for both of us. It’s not fair if I’m living the dream and he’s not.”

Wow. Would she consider marrying me? “Ha. Well, I’m hoping the novel will sell for a lot of money,” she says. “I’ve only read the first four chapters. It would be awful if it came out and it was shit.”

I ask whether her sons have seen her in anything, desperately racking my brain for any child-friendly fare that Colman might have appeared in. “I did Doctor Who, thinking there’s something they can watch,” she says. “I turned it on to be horrified and tried to turn it off again because there was mummy with a big scary mouth [in the episode, The Eleventh Hour, Colman’s character sports piranha-like fangs]. I didn’t really think it through.”

But back to drama school in Bristol. After graduating, Colman set about looking for straight roles, but always seemed to gravitate towards comedy. It’s at this point, with faultless comic timing, that her mobile phone goes off, her ringtone a honking clown’s horn. Her screen-saver is a picture of her dog, a ‘Jackapoo’ (a Jack Russell/poodle cross) called Alf. “They’re not supposed to moult,” she says. “But I keep finding hairs.”

There’s something canine about Colman’s nickname, Colly – she had to change her birth name, Sarah, to Olivia, because of an Equity clash with another Sarah Colman. “One of my best friends at university was called Olivia and I always loved her name,” she says. “I was never Sarah; I was always called by my nickname, Colly, so it didn’t seem so awful not to be called Sarah.”

Colman’s knack for comedy saw her progress through such shows as People Like Us, The Office, Black Books, Green Wing, as well as the aforementioned Mitchell and Webb collaborations. But it’s only with her two most recent sitcoms, Rev, in which plays the wife of Tom Hollander’s inner-city vicar, and Twenty Twelve, the Olympics comedy in which her PA shyly won the heart of boss Hugh Bonneville, that she has parts large enough to equal Peep Show’s magnificence. And Rev has won her a whole new fan-base.

“We went to try and do some filming at Greenbelt Christian rock festival,” she says, “but we couldn’t use the footage because everybody went ‘Aaah!’… It was like being in the Stones. There was a vicar shaking Tom’s hand and saying, ‘Thank you so much… I’m proud of my dog collar – you’ve shown us as fallible and human and trying our best’.”

Rev returns at the end of the year, although Bad Sugar, the telenovela pastiche co-starring Julia Davis and Sharon Horgan, surprisingly won’t be progressing beyond the pilot stage that was shown on Channel 4 last year. “It’s been decommissioned,” she says. ” I think there might be some new blood and it’s not their baby… I don’t know… politics.”

And then our time is up and it’s off to have her photograph taken – and I notice that this seemingly self-effacing actor, casually attired in black leggings and Ugg boots, is carrying a plastic bag with a pair of ultra-high heels, in the fashionable dominatrix style, and a birthday present to herself. It leaves me with a nagging feeling that there might be another Olivia Colman that I haven’t yet begun to meet.

Source: independent.co.uk – Is Olivia Colman Britian’s most versatile actress?

Rev to be remade in the US…

OCOAward-winning comedy Rev is to be remade in the US, with Desperate Housewives producer Bob Daily on board to write the American version.

The half-hour comedy series, which follows an inner-city vicar and his eclectic congregation, won the best sitcom Bafta in 2011.

The British version, starring Tom Hollander and Olivia Colman, recently won fans on the US streaming site Hulu.

It will return to BBC2 for a third series in 2014.

Hollander, who plays Rev Adam Smallbone, and who co-created the series, will consult on the US version with fellow creator James Wood.

The US set-up will centre on an Episcopal priest who leaves a small rural parish in Wisconsin to take over a failing inner-city church in a deprived Chicago neighbourhood, reports US industry website Deadline.

As with the British version, the congregation will include a homeless man and a crack addict.

For Daily, it marks a return to the half-hour sitcom, having spent five years on the award-winning US series Frasier before moving to Desperate Housewives.

Kenton Allen and Matthew Justice, of Britain’s Big Talk Productions – which produces Rev in the UK – confirmed they will executive produce the US version, but stressed that the project was still in development and no script was yet available.

Rev won best comedy at the South Bank Awards and picked up four prizes at the Broadcasting Press Guild Awards in March, including best comedy and entertainment show and best writing.

Hollander recently completed filming About Time, a new time-travel comedy from Love Actually director Richard Curtis. Colman is due to appear on the big screen early next year in Hyde Park on Hudson, playing the Queen Mother.

Source: bbc.co.uk – Rev to be remade for US television

Olivia wears Beckham for awards

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Olivia Colman has joked that she chose to wear Victoria Beckham to the London Evening Standard British Film Awards – because it meant she could eat more.

She revealed: “I’ve been looking at all her clothes and I think they’re really pretty.”

She laughed, pulling out the waist: “And you can eat in here and you don’t have to breathe in, which is always worth it.”

The Peep Show actress won Best Actress for her role as a battered wife in Paddy Considine’s Tyrannosaur.

She said: “Very excited, it’s obviously a very, very lovely feeling.

“To win things for this particular film feels pretty special because it’s probably the best part I will ever get, so it’s lovely that people have loved it just as much as I have.”

It was the latest in a run of awards for the Rev actress.

She said: “I’d like to be cool like lots of people and go ‘Yeah, it’s in the downstairs loo’, but they’re absolutely all over the mantelpiece, polished.”

A champagne reception before the ceremony was interrupted by a fire alarm, forcing the stars – including Tom Hiddleston, Poesy and Downton Abbey star Jessica Brown-Findlay – to be evacuated outside on to the street for a short time.

But everyone made light of the episode, swigging from miniature bottles of champagne and huddling together for warmth.

Olivia leads at British film awards

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Michael Fassbender, Olivia Colman and John Hurt stole the honours at Monday night’s Evening Standing British Film Awards which was a blazing success despite an alarming delay.

The awards took off to a rocky start when stars were evacuated from the venue following a fire alarm which put the ceremony behind schedule, according to BBC News.

Famous guests including Colman, Hurt, Clemence Poesy and Jessica Brown-Findlay stood out in the cold until it was deemed safe to return inside.

However the show continued without a hitch as prizes were handed out to the best in the business.

Fassbender won the best actor prize for his role in sex addiction drama ‘Shame’ and as Edward Rochester in ‘Jane Eyre’. He was not present for the awards so ‘Shame’ writer Abi Morgan accepted the prize on his behalf with a message from the actor saying he “truly honoured and delighted” by the win.

The best actress gong went to Olivia Colman for her performance in drama ‘Tyrannosaur.’ ‘The Iron Lady’ star beat Oscar winners Vanessa Redgrave, Rachel Weisz and Tilda Swinton for the honour.

John Hurt picked up the Alexander Walker lifetime achievement award for his contribution to cinema. ‘The Elephant Man’ star, 72, was presented his prize by ‘My Beautiful Laundrette’ director Stephen Frears.

The prize for best film went to Lynne Ramsay’s ‘We Need To Talk About Kevin,’ a drama about a woman who tries to deal with the grief of her teenage boy who goes on a high-school killing spree.

‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2’ picked up The People’s Choice Award for Blockbuster of the Year.

The awards were hosted by ‘Green Wing’ star Stephen Mangan at the London Film Museum

Source: entertainmentwise.com – Michael Fassbender, Olivia Colman lead British Film Awards

Charity encourages us to talk about mental health

ocoTime to Change, the mental illness charity organisation, is launching a new campaign to encourage people to talk about the issue of mental health.

The “It’s time to talk. It’s time to change” campaign aims to “remove the fear and awkwardness” around mental health by encouraging people to talk openly about it.

The TV, press, radio and digital campaign was created by Dare, and includes a series of cartoon strips showing common misunderstandings around mental health, drawn by Stephen Collins, who has previously created cartoons for the Times and Spectator.

Olivia Colman, who played Sophie in Channel 4 TV programme Peep show, will voice one of the characters in the radio ads.

The charity is also inviting people to make a pledge towards ending the silence around mental illness through an online portal that offers help on how to start a conversation on the subject or send e-cards to let someone know they are thinking of them.

Time to Change director Sue Baker says: “The aim of our social marketing campaign is to use creative, innovative methods to reach our target audience. It’s time to talk. It’s time to change, encourages the public to talk and open up about something that affects one in four people in our communities. Through the use of subtle humour in our advertising, we hope we can remove the awkwardness and fear that stops many people talking about mental health.”

The Time to Change campaign is jointly run by charities Mind and Rethink Mental Illness, and recently received new funding from the Department of Health and Comic Relief.

You can find out more about this charity here:Time to change

Source: marketingweek.co.uk – Charity encourages people to talk about mental health

Olivia is on her way to becoming a national treasure

ocoTHE New Year couldn’t be getting off to a better start for Olivia Colman, one of our most liked actresses seemingly on a fast-track to National Treasure status.

In November she won Best Actress at the Moet British Independent Film Awards for her heartbreaking performance as an abused wife in Paddy Considine’s Tyrannosaur, trumping Tilda Swinton in We Need To Talk About Kevin.

The film has shaken-off in sensational style any kind of perception of Colman as a strictly comic actress after years of appearances in some of out most popular TV comedies, including Peep Show, Green Wing and Rev.

Her role in the latter as a mumsy but frisky vicar’s wife has received whoops of appreciation from the genuine articles (“who wants to be portrayed as starchy?” she says) and a third series looks a certainty if star and co-creator Tom Hollander can rev himself up.

“I think he’s still a bit frazzled” she admits.

“It’s a solid year of work for him up to finishing the edit so I think if I was to ask ‘are we doing a third one?’ he might start twitching.”

Now she is starring opposite Meryl Streep in The Iron Lady as Carol Thatcher, a role she describes as even more intimidating than her battered spouse in Tyrannosaur.

The fear lay in the recognition factor – “we all know her voice and her face and I’m not good at impressions” – but Carol’s public profile proved a blessing in terms of research: Colman, 37, watched the entire series of I’m A Celebrity Get Me Out Of Here! in which Carol emerged triumphant as “Queen of The Jungle” in 2009.

“She was a favourite to lose when she went in and she ended up winning it” admires the actress who is completely convincing in the film, nailing Carol’s familiar voice with its soft Rs and looking like her too, aided by a prosthetic nose.

“She was gung-ho and witty and quite fun. She’s a ballsy person to play.” A tad potty too, I venture. “Yes, it’s great to play potty. Potty’s a good word.”

She recounts an episode in I’m A Celebrity in which Carol had to drive a car across a wobbly bridge over a ravine even though she can’t drive.

“She just climbed in thinking ‘death is preferable to failing the task and not feeding my comrades.’”

Yet Colman’s performance is no caricature and provides the picture with its warmest and most touching moments as Carol confronts the upsetting reality of her mother’s dementia.

It’s a storyline that has attracted controversy for it’s portrayal of Lady Thatcher as a lonely and vulnerable old lady conversing with the ghost of her late husband Dennis, played by Jim Broadbent.

It falls on Colman’s Carol to try and gently remind Lady Thatcher of her present-day circumstances  (“you’re no longer Prime Minister and daddy’s dead”) while the story flashbacks to her past glories and challenges as Britain’s first female Prime Minister.

Streep is magnificent (“I just watched her with my mouth open” says Colman) but some have questioned the taste of portraying the former PM in such a way while still alive.

“I feel very sad if people find it distasteful” says Colman, suddenly quite crestfallen.

“It’s not mocking or cruel, it’s sensitive and tender and I think it’s actually incredibly flattering for Margaret Thatcher. It does show the light and darkness of her reign, some of the unrest, so it’s honest like that, but above all it shows her as a woman who achieved something remarkable. Maybe people are saying things who haven’t seen the film yet.”

As for Carol, the actress has never met her and shrinks at the possibility of doing so, although it’s hard to see how Carol can be anything other than chuffed at the spot-on casting: like Carol, Colman exudes a game positivity that makes her company quite life-enhancing.

“I don’t want to meet her in case she hates me. In case I’ve done a really bad job.”

Of course she hasn’t. Her Carol is immensely sympathetic and humorous. Their politics may be different, says Colman, who grew up in Norfolk, the daughter of a nurse mother and chartered surveyor father, but she has great sympathy for Carol’s predicament as the offspring of a world famous mother.

“The children of people so extraordinarily famous have a pretty hard time of it” she suggests.

“Anything you achieve is going to be compared to them. I would hate it and I don’t think I’d cope with it so there’s something admirable about coming out and doing whatever you do when everyone’s looking. It takes a thick skin and courage.”

Colman is a mother herself, to two boys aged six and four, and the bulk of the childcare falls on her writer husband Ed Sinclair who works from home, especially in the last year when Colman found herself in almost constant demand.

The pair met while students in Cambridge, Colman attending a teacher training college which she left after a year to study drama at Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, Ed at the university proper.

“I always try not to take jobs away from home so I can get back every night and offer him some moral support” she says of family life.

“I definitely have an easier time of it. You’ll do anything for your children and utterly utterly adore them but it’s still pretty tiring and hard work.”

Ed is a “brilliant parent” she enthuses.

“He’s much better at it than I am actually, much cooler about things. I always assumed I’d be a terribly patient mum but it turns out I’m not!”

There doesn’t seem much prospect of a let-up in 2012 for Colman. Later this month (January) she starts rehearsing for her part in Noel Coward’s Hay Fever in London’s West End alongside Lindsay Duncan and Jeremy Northam and directed by Howard Davies.

“Lots of wonderful people are in it who know what they’re doing so I’m going to hide behind them” quips Colman who describes herself as “pretty rubbish” on stage.

She’ll also be seen as Queen Elizabeth, the future Queen Mother, in Hyde Park On Hudson, an account of a weekend in 1939 when King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visited President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor.

Directed by Roger Michell (Notting Hill), it’s a romantic drama centred on the complicated love life of the US President, played by the notoriously elusive Bill Murray.

“The film was five years in the making and trying to pin him down was like trying to nail jelly to the wall apparently” chuckles Colman who found the actor “hilarious, anarchic and brilliant.”

Although she says she’ll take whatever jobs “come my way”, there’s no doubt that Tyrannosaur, which she describes as “the thing I’ll be most proud of until I die”, has opened up new avenues for her as a dramatic actress.

“Yes, I’ve had some different things come through the letter box which is so nice, it’s really exciting. The ultimate dream is to do a bit of everything” she says, fizzing with good cheer.

Source: express.co.uk – Olivia on fast track to becoming national treasure

Hyde Park on Hudson has started filming

ocoFocus Features announced filming has begun on Hyde Park on Hudson starring Bill Murray and Laura Linney, and directed by Roger Michell (Notting Hill). Richard Nelson wrote the script with Michell, Kevin Loader, and David Aukin producing.

The cast of the historical drama also includes Olivia Williams, Samuel West, Olivia Colman, Elizabeth Wilson, Elizabeth Marvel, and Eleanor Bron. Filming is taking place in the UK with Focus aiming for a late 2012 theatrical release.
Announcing the start of production, Focus Features CEO James Schamus said, “Filmgoers will be intrigued by this unique exploration of the all-too-human side of one of history’s great men. Roger is an actor’s director who will guide Bill and Laura through their playing of Richard’s script, which beautifully encompasses satire and drama.”

The official synopsis: “In June 1939, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Murray) and his wife Eleanor (Williams) host the King and Queen of England (West and Colman) for a weekend at the Roosevelt home at Hyde Park on Hudson, in upstate New York – the first-ever visit of a reigning English monarch to America. With Britain facing imminent war with Germany, the Royals are desperately looking to FDR for support. But international affairs must be juggled with the complexities of FDR’s domestic establishment, as wife, mother, and mistresses all conspire to make the royal weekend an unforgettable one. Seen through the eyes of Daisy (Linney), Franklin’s distant cousin, neighbor, and intimate, the weekend will produce not only a special relationship between two great nations, but, for Daisy – and through her, for us all – a deeper understanding of the mysteries of love and friendship.”

Source: movies.about.com – Hyde park on Hudson starts shooting

Olivia lends her voice to Arrietty

oco Here’s the first UK poster for the next Studio Ghibli picture, Arrietty. It has been adapted from Mary Norton‘s The Borrowers by Hayao Miyazaki, Keiko Niwa and director Hiromasa Yonebayashi. As you’d expect, it looks wonderful.

And it will sound pretty good too – note that the UK dubbed version will feature a different (and indeed, preferable) voice cast to the US iteration. We in blighty will get Saoirse Ronan, Olivia Colman, Mark Strong and Phyllida Law.

Oh, and somebody the poster calls Tom Holland. I wonder if they mean Tom Hollander? Because Tom Holland, writer-director Fright Night and Child’s Play seems like an odd match. Oops typo.

UPDATE: A subsequent press release refers to “newcomer Tom Holland”, so that settles that.

Anyway, a good cast. The US get Bridgit Mendler, Will Arnett, Amy Poehler, Carol Burnett – none of whom exactly seem to match the setting or tone so well. Score one to Optimum, the UK distributors.

Having said all of that, I’ll still opt for a subtitled version, personally.

The film will go on release on July 29th, though Picture House Cinemas will be screening it as their Kid’s Club in the 23rd. Adults will need to have a kid with them, but there’s a lot of Little Bleeders with families, I know.

Let’s score Optimum another point for getting the film out this year. US audiences will be waiting until February 2012. If I were in the States I’d start shopping for a multi-region Blu-ray player now.

Source: bleedingcool.com – Studio Ghibilis Arietty UK poster