FOR TRAILER, SEE THE BOTTOM OF THIS ARTICLE
According to the Fangoria article "First news on Fantasia's 10th event" (May 11th), Simon Rumley's The Living and the Dead (working title was "The Living in the Home of the Dead") is scheduled to be screened at the 2006 Fantasia Festival in Montréal in July. The movie had its world première at the 35th International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) on January 28th.
As was previously reported here and there on Twitch, the screenplay for The Living and the Dead was written by Rumley. The movie stars Leo Bill as James Brocklebank, Roger Lloyd Pack as Lord Donald Brocklebank, Kate Fahy as Lady Nancy Brocklebank, and Sarah Ball as Nurse Mary.
The Living and the Dead was produced by Giant Films Limited of the U.K., and was "shot on location at Tottenham House, the Wiltshire country home of Lord Cardigan of the Crimean War-famed family" (quote from "Heart Of Darkness", Exposure, Issue 33 - see bottom of this article for link).
Below is a description of The Living and the Dead from the IFFR website.
Impressively designed feature about an aristocratic family that is down on its luck and faces a tragic end as a result of chance and the mentally handicapped son.
Aristocratic, impoverished and reclusive, with a truly historical lineage, Lord and Lady Brocklebank (Donald and Nancy) live in the magnificent but decrepit Longleigh House with their mentally challenged son James. Close to bankruptcy, Donald is negotiating to sell the family home when Nancy is taken seriously ill. In order to pay for her operation, Donald has to leave the estate for a few days and so arranges for the family nurse (Nurse Mary) to take control. James however wants to prove to his father that he is a responsible adult and perfectly capable of looking after his mother. As it becomes less and less apparent who is ill and who is not, what is real and what is not, the unimaginable becomes imaginable and the nightmare begins. The above is a factual description of this impressive and confusing film in every respect. Simon Rumley, who says he was inspired by directors such as Tsukamoto Shinya and Darren Aronofsky, provides a mathematically precise sketch of the demise of a family, or the decay of a dynasty. Rumley makes the best possible use of the fantastic acting of the three protagonists and hallucinating camera work to portray the psyche of the pill-popping son. The downward spiral of the story keeps the viewer in an iron grip right up to the bitter end.
The Living and the Dead trailer (downloadable 13.4 MB MOV file - viewer discretion is advised)
Fuji Photo Film (UK) Ltd.: Exposure: "Heart Of Darkness" (downloadable 224 KB PDF file)
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