Blood Cells (film)

Blood Cells
Directed by Luke Seomore, Joseph Bull
Produced by Ben Young, Samm Hailay
Written by Luke Seomore Joseph Bull, Ben Young
Starring
Music by Luke Seomore
Cinematography David Procter
Edited by Darren Baldwin
Production
companies
  • Third Films
Distributed by
  • Picturehouse cinemas
Release date
30th June 2015 United Kingdom
Running time

86 minutes[1]

  • United Kingdom
  • Italy

Blood Cells is a critically acclaimed [2] 2015 British drama film directed by Luke Seomore & Joseph Bull. The script was written by Luke Seomore, Joseph Bull and Ben Young. The film stars Barry Ward, Hayley Squires, Chloe Pirrie, Jimmy Akingbola and Francis McGee.

It premiered at 71st Venice International Film Festival [3] in 2014. It received it's UK premiered in 2015 at Edinburgh International Film Festival [4] and was nominated for the Best British Feature Film and Best Performance in a British Feature Film.

Overview

Adam has lived a rootless existence since his family's farm was destroyed by the Foot & Mouth epidemic of 2001. His life imploded and he abandoned his family after a single devastating incident. He has spent the years since on the nomadic fringes of British society, cycling through transitory jobs and transitory relationships, adrift from his family and past. When his younger brother Aiden reaches out to him to announce the birth of his first child-Adam is about to become an uncle-there is an ultimatum attached: come home now, or never come home again. Adam embarks on a journey home that is at once tortured and exhilarating, a panoramic tour through the broken and beautiful margins of Britain. As eruptions from his secret past begin to emerge, Adam struggles to break free from an exile that must now end before it swallows him for good.

Cast

Release

The film was released through Picturehouse cinemas on 30 June 2015[5]

Reception

Blood Cells received critical acclaim. On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 100% rating, an average score of 7.1/10.[6] Kevin Maher at The Times give the film 4/5 stars and stated 'is a ridiculously accomplished film…it signals the arrival of future film-making heavyweights' [7]

References

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