Exclusive: British filmmaker Marianna Dean has wrapped production on her latest pic Voidance starring James Cosmo, which we can share a first look from above.
The pic is currently in post-production and marks Dean’s second feature. Starring alongside Cosmo are Zoe Cunningham (Breaking Infinity), Neil Bishop, Mim Shaikh, Billy Price (Hollyoaks) and Chris Charles (Hollyoaks).
Dean serves as producer on the project with Cunningham and Tom Taplin. The film is written by Simon X. Frederick (The Informer) and is produced by Mind Engagement Productions and Unfolding Entertainment.
The pic was shot in London. The synopsis reads: Voidance begins with Alana Toro (Cunningham) in her final exam to join the Atic Guard. She is set a challenge: work out how she would prevent a historical terrorist attack that threatened the popularity...
The pic is currently in post-production and marks Dean’s second feature. Starring alongside Cosmo are Zoe Cunningham (Breaking Infinity), Neil Bishop, Mim Shaikh, Billy Price (Hollyoaks) and Chris Charles (Hollyoaks).
Dean serves as producer on the project with Cunningham and Tom Taplin. The film is written by Simon X. Frederick (The Informer) and is produced by Mind Engagement Productions and Unfolding Entertainment.
The pic was shot in London. The synopsis reads: Voidance begins with Alana Toro (Cunningham) in her final exam to join the Atic Guard. She is set a challenge: work out how she would prevent a historical terrorist attack that threatened the popularity...
- 5/20/2024
- by Zac Ntim
- Deadline Film + TV
Stars: Neil Bishop, Zoe Cunningham, Martin Bishop, Zed Josef, Jonny Phillips | Written by David Trotti | Directed by Marianna Dean
Breaking Infinity is the kind of film I both love and dread seeing on my review schedule. I love it because indie science fiction is frequently full of interesting ideas and concepts that bigger-budget films don’t deal with. I hate it because, often due to their indie budgets, they can’t do those ideas justice. This film had created a bit of a buzz on its festival run, but could it live up to the hype?
Liam lies in a hospital bed as an old man shouts at him to wake up. He does, briefly appearing in a burning building before finding himself back in the hospital where he passes out only to wake up as a different, less injured, version of himself in a different version of the hospital.
Breaking Infinity is the kind of film I both love and dread seeing on my review schedule. I love it because indie science fiction is frequently full of interesting ideas and concepts that bigger-budget films don’t deal with. I hate it because, often due to their indie budgets, they can’t do those ideas justice. This film had created a bit of a buzz on its festival run, but could it live up to the hype?
Liam lies in a hospital bed as an old man shouts at him to wake up. He does, briefly appearing in a burning building before finding himself back in the hospital where he passes out only to wake up as a different, less injured, version of himself in a different version of the hospital.
- 6/2/2023
- by Jim Morazzini
- Nerdly
One of the great things about science fiction as a genre is that you don’t need a big budget or a lot of experience to create something which will make an impression – just a strong idea and sufficient skill to flesh it out effectively. Marianna Dean’s ambitious feature début isn’t wholly original in its ideas but it makes a better fist of them that most of its peers, whilst confident direction and solid performances ensure that the audience will get something out of it regardless.
Time travel often seems like easy material for the inexperienced writer. It isn’t. it’s very easy for someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing to end up hopelessly tangled or just bore viewers to death with repetition. This film is, thankfully, smarter than that, with David Trotti’s well considered script acknowledging from the outset that a strong,...
Time travel often seems like easy material for the inexperienced writer. It isn’t. it’s very easy for someone who doesn’t know what they’re doing to end up hopelessly tangled or just bore viewers to death with repetition. This film is, thankfully, smarter than that, with David Trotti’s well considered script acknowledging from the outset that a strong,...
- 5/23/2023
- by Jennie Kermode
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
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