Type | Private limited |
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Industry | Film and television production |
Founded | July 2007 |
Founder(s) |
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Headquarters | London, England |
Key people |
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Left Bank Pictures is an English film and television production company. It was formed in 2007 by Andy Harries, formerly controller of drama, comedy and film at Granada Productions, and Francis Hopkinson and Marigo Kehoe. The company is the first British media company to receive investment from BBC Worldwide, the commercial venture of the BBC; BBC Worldwide took a 25% equity stake, worth £1 million, in Left Bank in exchange for first-look distribution rights on all television productions. The company operates both television and film production departments. Key personnel are managing director Marigo Kehoe, formerly head of production in Harries' drama department at Granada, Francis Hopkinson, formerly senior commissioning editor of drama at Channel 4, and Suzanne Mackie, formerly director of development at Harbour Pictures.
Left Bank Pictures' productions include the television series Wallander, School of Comedy and Zen, and the film The Damned United.
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Left Bank Pictures was founded in 2007 by Andy Harries, formerly controller of drama, comedy and film at Granada Productions, Francis Hopkinson and Marigo Kehoe. The company is the first British media company to receive equity investment from BBC Worldwide, the commercial venture of the BBC; BBC Worldwide took a 25% stake, worth £1 million, in Left Bank in exchange for first-look distribution rights on all television productions.[1] Some critics were concerned about a conflict of interest for the publicly-funded BBC; in The Guardian, Steve Hewlett wrote that the deal could be a "back-door way of getting around the rules preventing the BBC producing programmes for its British rivals". Hewlett also commented that the investment might limit Left Bank's future prospects, as it was "tied to" the BBC.[2] Harries defended the investment, stating that both Martin Sorrell and Richard Branson had been approached to invest in the company but both wanted a complete acquisition rather than just a share.[3] Harries also approached Jon Feltheimer at Lionsgate.[1]
In January 2008, Left Bank took a 15% stake in struggling production company Hardy & Sons, with a view to relaunching it as a drama and documentary production unit with BBC Worldwide.[4] Left Bank Pictures had a turnover of £5.5 million its first year, with at least £20 million predicted for the second.[1] In December 2008, Left Bank Pictures was one of many independent production companies to receive the production vision award from the UK Film Council.[5] The award part-funded Left Bank's film development slate. In February 2009, Suzanne Mackie, formerly head of development at Harbour Pictures, joined the company as head of film.[6]
Hopkinson announced his departure in 2011 to take up a new position with ITV Studios. Michael Casey joined the company, taking on the development slate, and Simon Lupton joined the comedy department.[7]
Left Bank Pictures' first television commission was Wallander, a television adaptation of Henning Mankell's Kurt Wallander novels. The first series was filmed on location in Skåne, Sweden in the summer of 2008, and broadcast in November and December 2008.[8] The series won the British Academy Television Award for Best Drama Series.[9] The BBC announced the commissioning of a second series in May 2009.[10] Filming ran over the summer again and the series was broadcast in January 2010.
In March 2008, it was announced that Left Bank would be producing Strike Back, a six-part series for Sky1 based on Chris Ryan's novel.[11] The production, starring Richard Armitage and Andrew Lincoln, was filmed on location in South Africa in 2009 for broadcast on Sky1 and Sky1 HD in 2010.[12] Also in 2008, Left Bank produced its first feature film; The Damned United was directed by Tom Hooper from a script adapted by Peter Morgan from David Peace's novel The Damned Utd.
2008 also saw Left Bank's first commission for Channel 4; Kids School of Comedy, a pilot sketch show, was produced for the Comedy Lab strand, and was based on a stage show in which Andy Harries' son performed. A six-part School of Comedy series was commissioned by E4 and was broadcast in 2009.[13] A second series has since been commissioned. At the end of 2008, Left Bank received its first commission from ITV, to produce Frank Deasy's four-part serial drama Father & Son.[14] The drama was co-financed by ITV, the Irish broadcaster RTÉ and the Irish Film Board. The production was based in Dublin, where most of the programme was filmed, even though it was set in Manchester, England.[15] RTÉ broadcast the drama in 2009, and it went on to win the Irish Film and Television Award for Best Single Drama/Drama Serial category.[16] It was broadcast on ITV1 in June 2010.
In 2009, Left Bank produced the six-part romantic comedy series Married Single Other for ITV.[17] The series stars Ralf Little, Shaun Dooley, Lucy Davis, Miranda Raison, Amanda Abbington and Dean Lennox Kelly, and was filmed on location in Leeds. It was broadcast on ITV1 in February and March 2010.[18][19] In 2010, Left Bank produced an adaptation of Peter Robinson's Aftermath for ITV, starring Stephen Tompkinson as DCI Banks,[20][21] and Zen, an adaptation of three of Michael Dibdin's Aurelio Zen novels, which was filmed on location in Italy for BBC Scotland.[22] In 2011, Sky1 broadcast Left Bank's four-part Mad Dogs, starring John Simm, Philip Glenister, Marc Warren and Max Beesley, and Optimum Releasing will distribute the feature film Rafta Rafta.[23][24]
Left Bank is in development on the features Another Brick in the Wall about the children from the Pink Floyd track, the Monty Python-based No Naughty Bits, and Gaza, about a Jewish doctor.[24]