FOR TRAILERS, SEE THE BOTTOM OF THIS ARTICLE
A trailer for Simon Rumley's The Living and the Dead has just been added to MySpace by international sales agent Imagination Worldwide LLC; it's different than the one on the official subsite for the movie.
The Living and the Dead is scheduled to be screened at the Philadelphia Film Festival (PFF) on April 12th and 15th. The movie had its world première at the International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) on January 28th of last year.
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.
Here's a description of The Living and the Dead from the PFF website: "A hallucinatory British gothic fantasia of death and psychological decay, this haunting film from director Simon Rumley explores the tormented relationship between a dying woman and her schizophrenic son. ¶ Offering further evidence that the most disturbing and unsettling 'horror' films in contemporary cinema are works that fall just outside of any traditional definition of the genre, The Living and the Dead does not deal with any supernatural shocks, but rather the film confronts the greater horror of illness, psychological collapse and mortality. An international festival favorite from Rotterdam to Montreal's Fantasia to Buenos Aires, this grim and haunting drama from young British filmmaker Simon Rumley marks the director as a definite talent to watch. With increasingly nightmarish precision, Rumley's film chronicles the mental decay of James, as the schizophrenic young man is left to tend to his terminally ill mother, Nancy, in their crumbling English countryside estate. James' father must travel to London and entrusts Nancy's care to James and the matriarch's nurse -- unfortunately, James begins experimenting with his psychoactive medication and sinks into a hellish world of hallucination and paranoia, barring the nurse from the mansion and submitting his helpless mother to his madness. Rumley deftly utilizes the decaying rural manor as an effectively labyrinthine visual metaphor for James' crumbling psychological state, and The Living and the Dead becomes a poignant and powerful portrait of insanity and humanity."
For more information on The Living and the Dead, see Twitch's fourth, third, second, and first articles on it.
MySpace: The Living and the Dead trailer #2 page
The Living and the Dead large trailer #1 (downloadable 13.4 MB MOV file - viewer discretion is advised)
The Living and the Dead medium trailer #1 (downloadable 4.6 MB MOV file - viewer discretion is advised)
The Living and the Dead official subsite
Imagination Worldwide: The Living and the Dead
PFF: The Living and the Dead
Twitch: The Living and the Dead review
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