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Showing posts with label Noel Fielding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noel Fielding. Show all posts

Thursday, 18 June 2009

The Bunny and the Bull - More photos from Road Movie in a Flat film

When I first saw some pictures for this film back in February I was intrigued. I then spotted a brief advert featuring clips from The Bunny and The Bull on Film 4 a week or two ago. It didn't show that much but it was good to see some footage. Unfortunately, I haven't tracked down a copy of the ad to post on the site.

In the meantime these photos will have to do.
Bunny And The Bull is a comedy road movie set entirely in a flat. Stephen Turnbull hasn't been outside in months and when he finds his mind hurtling back to the disastrous trek he took around Europe with his friend Bunny, a catalogue of adventures unfold. Starring Edward Hogg (Brothers Of The Head ) and Simon Farnaby ('The Mighty Boosh', 'Jam & Jerusalem'), Bunny And The Bull promises to be a touching journey to the end of the room.
Mismatched comedy courtesy of the men behind 'The Mighty Boosh.' Features Noel Fielding, Julian Barrat and Richard Ayoade of 'The It Crowd'. Directed by Paul King.


Source: Film 4

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Monday, 2 March 2009

The Mighty Boosh - Cool art work

I just think that this is a cracking piece of art work by the mighty Joe Murtagh. It is Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt as Vince Noir and Howard Moon from The Mighty Boosh.

Check out Joe's official site for many more pop culture pieces of art work.

Cheers to Alan S for pointing them out.

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The Mighty Boosh film - Who could Robert Smith play?


I posted recently about the boys from The Mighty Boosh appearing in a film called The Bunny and The Bull. However, what I'd like to see is a fully Booshed up film.

The Mighty Boosh is an excellent piece of surreal, bizarre, but most of all laugh out loud funny television. It was created by and stars Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding and is directed by Paul King.

It has long been mooted that it will eventually reach the big screen and a little rumour from the boys shows that this may be moving forward.

Speaking at the NME awards - where The Mighty Boosh won Best TV Show - Noel Fielding talked about his dream casting for the movie spin-off. Noel Fielding is after Robert Smith, front man of The Cure, to play his uncle. Thinking about it that is pretty much spot on casting.

Steve Coogan is a producer of the TV Show so no doubt he will join Fielding and Noel Barratt in the film.

Click here to watch Noel chatting about it.

Of course there is no actual date, script or much else in place for this as far as I am aware, but it does sound promising doesn't it (if any hardcore Boosh fans know any more then let me know).

Who else would you like to see in The Mighty Boosh film?

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Thursday, 26 February 2009

UPDATED: Bunny and the Bull - Comedy road movie set in a flat. Moss, Howard Moon and Vince Noir are in it

Bunny & The Bull is a comedy road movie set entirely in a flat. Stephen Turnbull hasn't been outside in months, and when he finds his mind hurtling back to the disastrous trek around Europe he undertook with his friend Bunny a catalogue of adventures unfold. Stephen's flat becomes the springboard for an extraordinary odyssey through lands made up of snapshots and souvenir replica landmarks within his imagination. Bunny and the Bull is a touching and beautiful journey to the end of the room.

UPDATE: Just posted a new story about Noel Fielding talking about The Mighty Boosh film.
Directed by Paul King (The Mighty Boosh) it stars Edward Hogg as Stephen, Simon Farnaby as Bunny and Verónica Echegui as Eloisa.
However, it also stars Richard Ayoade (The IT Crowd, Garth Merenghi's Dark Place), Noel Fielding (The Mighty Boosh, The IT Crowd) and Julian Barrett (The Mighty Boosh, Nathan Barley). The fact they are in it and listening to the plot does make it sound very Boosh like which is a very good thing in my book. Wonder if there will be any crimping in it?


Source: Quiet Earth
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Thursday, 2 October 2008

Richard Ayoade, the Mr Glass of British Comedy talks directing music videos and movies.

Del sent me this interview from The Guardian.

Cowering behind thick black spectacles and quavering in his extraordinarily soft, old man's voice, Richard Ayoade is forced to describe the embarrassing successes and unmerited achievements of his life so far. His school band was "the worst ever". He became president of the "very uncool" Cambridge Footlights because "there was a big shortage of people" and performed "massively mediocre" comedy. After "wasting everyone's time" with stand-up, he began directing music videos thanks to a "fortuitous" meeting, and his first ever video - for Arctic Monkeys' Fluorescent Adolescent - was only nominated for the inaugural UK Music Video Awards "because the song is so good". He is best known for his portrayal of uber-nerd Moss in Channel 4's The IT Crowd but has a "miniscule range" and no other acting offers. "I'm not sure I'd hire myself in anything. I certainly couldn't be an actor. That would be terrible. For everyone."

In short, this 31-year-old actor/writer/director would have you believe he is a hopeless loser. "This probably illustrates why I haven't done many ... um, you know," he tails off. "I'm just terrible. At talking. With words."

The trouble is, despite Ayoade's protestations, he is probably the coolest man in London right now. His film of Arctic Monkeys in concert will be shown in cinemas this month. He has directed videos for Vampire Weekend and the Last Shadow Puppets. He is adapting a novel for a film and shooting the third series of the IT Crowd. Women adore him (he doesn't tell me this; they do) and he reluctantly admits to being friends with Arctic Monkeys' Alex Turner ("partly because he lives in London now") and the Mighty Boosh, in which he appears ("Everyone in the cast is their friend, really").

It is hard not to prod someone who so shyly plays everything down. You are one of the coolest men in the capital, aren't you, I say. He shifts uncomfortably. "No. I really don't think I'm cool. I'm not." He scrabbles around desperately for evidence. "I don't know anything about computers. I resisted getting the internet for a long time. Even saying, 'Getting the internet' ..." You'll soon be in various style magazines' "cool lists", I prod. "I don't think I'm in danger of that," he replies with conviction.

Ayoade is an only child. His Norwegian mother and Nigerian father met in London and the family moved to Ipswich when he was young. What was it like growing up there? "I have no particular ill to speak of Ipswich. It was fine," he says. "I just apologise in advance for being very unexciting, which will continue." As a teenager, Ayoade discovered grunge - "lots of people going into guitar shops and playing the first four chords of Smells Like Teen Spirit" - and would patiently wait for "indie week" on the Chart Show, which came around every three weeks with 30-second clips of Nirvana or the Pixies. Aged 15, he went to Brixton Academy to see his heroes, Dinosaur Jr. "I was standing in what I thought was a really good position, quite close, and everyone just started jumping up and down. I lost half a tooth immediately. I didn't know everyone jumped up and down. Because I was from Ipswich."

There were no drama classes at his Catholic boys' school but Ayoade volunteered to do some comedy with the Footlights when he pitched up at Cambridge to study law. It was the proving ground for John Cleese, Stephen Fry, Sacha Baron Cohen and so on, although Ayoade insists he is not being "disingenuous" when he says it was not popular at all - although Peep Show's David Mitchell was a member when he was a first-year student - and he became president by default. "No one wanted to do it, so it wasn't like having to fight through swaths of people," he says with typical hesitancy. "I don't think this is a lie."

With co-writer Matthew Holness, Ayoade took his spoof horror comedy stage show, Garth Marenghi's Fright Knight, to the Edinburgh Fringe in 2000 and won the Perrier comedy award there in 2001. Two Channel 4 series - Garth Marenghi's Darkplace and Man to Man with Dean Learner - followed, alongside roles in Nathan Barley and The Mighty Boosh after Ayoade met and performed with Julian Barratt and Noel Fielding at the Edinburgh Fringe.

Since then, he has become best known for The IT Crowd. To play Moss, the director pointedly instructed him: "He's the geekiest person in the world. Just do it in your own voice." Ayoade's unique style of speaking elevates Moss above the Mr Muscle stereotype as does his understanding that true nerds are completely unselfconscious (unlike Ayoade). He based Moss on stage-show technicians. "The main attribute that they seem to share is an enthusiasm for life. They are all very positive. You go, 'How are you?' and they go, 'Great! I've just bought a dog!' and it's very charming and not mean-spirited in any way."

Things took a more unusual turn when Ayoade had a meeting with a film company, Warp, to discuss script ideas and mentioned that he would love to direct a music video. Through Warp's connections, he met Arctic Monkeys in Sheffield and created the video for Fluorescent Adolescent, a funny and surreal clown fight in the style of The Sweeney. Since then, he has made a flurry of videos, including Vampire Weekend's Oxford Comma - a one-shot video of "revolutionary farmers" that "looks Wes Anderson-y and was meant to look more Godard-y but not in a po-faced way" - and Super Furry Animals' Run Away - "like a Serge Gainsbourg TV special, a very melodramatic story".

Old cars are an Ayoade trademark. "I like people playing guitars leaning up against cars or in a field. It's a bit like Monty Python being in a field playing instruments," he says. "Cars are good for entrances and exits. And there is something about driving that is quite cliched in a funny way. I like Roy Orbison's video for I Drove All Night because it's so literal. It is just a man driving throughout the night. I like that silliness. To be in a video is a ridiculous thing. It's almost impossible to do it without any humour."

Despite his meticulousness (Ayoade listens to a song "about 500 times" to match his vision to its pace and music) and esoteric references (his smoky, atmospheric video for the Last Shadow Puppets' My Mistakes Were Made For You was inspired by Federico Fellini's cult film Toby Dammit), Ayoade's videos are playful and funny. He particularly admires Spike Jonze, who made the videos for the Beastie Boys' Sabotage and Weezer's Buddy Holly. Apart from Dinosaur Jr and Kings of Leon, he would most like to direct "a nunsploitation" for Girls Aloud "with them as nuns but in a horror setting. The nun chainsaw video. But I'm sure that's probably not a direction they are going in," he says.

He certainly has a winning pitch based on the success of Fluorescent Adolescent, which failed to reach No 1 unlike most of their earlier singles. "Arctic Monkeys' song was so clearly brilliant," he says, "so I'm able to bring a unique brand of commercial failure to the most successful people."

Ayoade is now adapting Submarine, the acclaimed debut novel by Joe Dunthorne, which tells the darkly comic tale of an intellectual teenager who tries to solve his parents' marital difficulties. He hopes to direct the film next summer. Until then, he may have to cope with winning some awards and getting recognised on the street. He gets approached a bit, which is fine, he says, because "there's a level of slight justified contempt that you can have for comedians". He shifts awkwardly. "If I am introduced to anyone, I find it incredibly embarrassing - and that's quite an immature position to have arrived at, at my age. It's obviously awkward but I don't mean that in an ungrateful way".

• Richard Ayoade is nominated in the Best Director and Best Rock Video categories at this year's UK Music Video Awards on October 14