#glenn-leyburn

[ follow ]
London music
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Curated chaos': Danny Boyle on the pop culture spectacular' he's bringing to London's Southbank Centre

Danny Boyle's 'You Are Here' celebrates 75 years of youth culture with a one-day immersive event featuring 1,000 performers at London's Southbank Centre.
Film
fromIndependent
1 week ago

'First thing I did was bring the team to see the bog bodies in the National Museum' - Hollywood director Lee Cronin on giving his take on The Mummy an Irish spin

Lee Cronin's new take on 'The Mummy' emphasizes personal loss and horror set against a haunting landscape.
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Bryan Dobson: 'I have a wonderful letter written by my father to his mother-in-law when my parents got married'

Bryan Dobson stated, 'After nearly four decades at RTÉ, I found retirement to be a new chapter, filled with family time and personal projects.'
Media industry
Independent films
fromIndieWire
2 weeks ago

Thierry Fremaux on Why 'Today, We Never Trust Images We See' - but We Can Trust the Lumiere Brothers and 'Apocalypse Now'

Thierry Frémaux highlights the enduring impact of the Lumière brothers' invention on modern cinema despite technological advancements.
SF LGBT
fromAnOther
2 weeks ago

How Europe's Biggest LGBTQ+ Festival Helped Shape 40 Years of Queer Cinema

BFI Flare celebrates its 40th anniversary as Europe's largest queer film festival, providing essential platforms for LGBTQ+ filmmakers and diverse stories worldwide.
#irish-film-industry
fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
LA food

Irish filmmakers bask in green glow of success in LA as all eyes turn to Oscars hopeful Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard, it makes me proud,' says Gleeson as Oscar Wildes' 'Irish' rally behind Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard,' says 'Harry Potter' star Domhnall Gleeson as annual Oscar Wildes partygoers rally behind Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard,' says 'Harry Potter' star Gleeson as Oscar Wildes' 'Irish' rally behind Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
LA food

Irish filmmakers bask in green glow of success in LA as all eyes turn to Oscars hopeful Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard, it makes me proud,' says Gleeson as Oscar Wildes' 'Irish' rally behind Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard,' says 'Harry Potter' star Domhnall Gleeson as annual Oscar Wildes partygoers rally behind Jessie Buckley

fromIndependent
3 weeks ago
Film

'Culturally, we've always punched pretty hard,' says 'Harry Potter' star Gleeson as Oscar Wildes' 'Irish' rally behind Jessie Buckley

Photography
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

Films Are Fantasies. Here Are Their Realities.

Atsushi Nishijima, an on-set stills photographer, has documented major films over the past decade and a half, capturing candid moments between takes on sets directed by prominent filmmakers.
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
3 weeks ago

'Derry Girls' creator returns with a gleeful riff on the murder mystery

Netflix's How to Get to Heaven from Belfast is a tonally complex crime comedy that prioritizes character and atmosphere over traditional plot mechanics, following three middle-aged Belfast women investigating their estranged friend's suspicious death.
Film
fromThe New Yorker
3 weeks ago

Paul Mescal's Starter Pack of Cultural Essentials

Paul Mescal identifies Blue Valentine, Jake Minch's album George, and Department of Speculation as his current cultural essentials that profoundly impact his perspective on relationships and human connection.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Plan to turn Irish borderlands into Unesco region of literature'

A literary heritage initiative aims to rebrand the Ireland-Northern Ireland border as a Unesco region of literature, creating nine guided routes through 11 counties associated with major writers like Yeats, Beckett, and Heaney.
London music
fromIndependent
3 weeks ago

Peter Flanagan: Someone shouts 'potatoes' at me during a comedy gig - it's something the Irish living in Britain have become used to

Audience members who heckle with historical references but lack understanding of that history demonstrate ignorance alongside rudeness.
#cinematography
Arts
fromwww.npr.org
1 month ago

Iraqi film draws on Saddam-era childhood in tale of life under dictatorship

Director Hasan Hadi's debut film depicts a child's dangerous quest to bake a cake for Saddam Hussein, inspired by his traumatic childhood experience under Iraq's brutal regime.
Writing
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

I paid people with pints and chips': Georgina Duncan on the prize-winning play she tapped out on her phone

Sapling won the Women's playwriting prize; the Belfast-set drama examines teenage grief and the long, community-defining scars left by past violence.
Television
fromCN Traveller
1 month ago

Where was 'How to Get to Heaven from Belfast' filmed?

How to Get to Heaven from Belfast is a six-part Netflix series filmed across Northern Ireland, Dublin, London and Europe, featuring iconic Belfast locations.
fromConsequence
1 month ago

Stream On This Week: A New Michelle Yeoh Short and a Ciaran Hinds Recommendation!

Welcome to the latest issue of Stream On, the weekly newsletter from Consequence that answers the eternally confounding question: What films and TV shows should you be watching? (Subscribe here!) We're looking at all the new and recent releases from Netflix, Hulu, Disney+, Prime Video, Paramount+, Peacock, HBO Max, and more for ideas - not to mention a Blast From the Past and streaming suggestions from this week's special guest: Midwinter Break star Ciarán Hinds!
Television
US politics
fromwww.independent.co.uk
2 months ago

Brendan Gleeson: I am tired of the trope of the toxic father'

The Independent operates paywall-free, on-the-ground journalism funded by donations to support investigations, documentaries, and reporting across political spectrums.
Music
fromIrish Independent
2 months ago

Michael Flatley wins case in Belfast court over new Lord of the Dance shows: 'We are going to lift the roof'

Justice Simpson lifted the injunction stopping Flatley from canceling or interfering with Lord of the Dance shows because of risk of unquantifiable lost revenue.
Miscellaneous
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

They don't see the need for division anymore': how teenagers of Belfast are escaping the city's past in pictures

Belfast young people live everyday teenage lives amid entrenched segregation, peace walls, and socioeconomic pressures, not solely defined by sectarian violence.
#northern-ireland
fromBusiness Matters
2 months ago

From roundtable to the camera: The Traitors' Brian Davidson celebrates record-breaking year for Studio Snap

Davidson, a professional photographer and owner of Glasgow-based Studio Snap, is celebrating his strongest trading year to date, with revenues up more than 70 per cent in 2025. The surge follows his memorable appearance on series two of The Traitors, which turned him into a familiar face for millions of viewers, and, unexpectedly, a powerful brand amplifier for his business.
Photography
fromFilmmaker Magazine
2 months ago

"...As Long as You're Telling the Truth": Jordan Lage, Back To One, Episode 376

Jordan Lage is an award-winning actor, writer, director and founding member of the Atlantic Theater Company, which celebrates its 41st anniversary this year. He studied acting at New York University under the tutelage of playwright David Mamet and actor William H. Macy and then taught acting and playwriting at the Atlantic Theater Acting School for nearly 30 years. Best known for his work performing the plays of David Mamet's, he
Arts
Television
fromThe Independent
1 month ago

Downton Abbey star opens up on working with 'proper multi-tasker' Guy Ritchie

Hugh Bonneville praises Guy Ritchie's multitasking directing, hints at an unconfirmable Gentlemen role, reflects on Downton Abbey's unexpected longevity, and doubts further Paddington appearances.
Television
fromIndependent
2 months ago

Tom Vaughan-Lawlor: 'I could never work with my wife - the idea of being mean or cruel to her, I couldn't do it'

Tom Vaughan-Lawlor relies on his wife Claire to coax him into social life and experiences a strong duality between public performance and private introspection.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

How to Get to Heaven from Belfast review if you see nothing else this year, watch this

Three middle-aged women may be all you need for anything. To run a business, raise a village, end a war, retool a civilisation, empty the loft. Even more usefully, you can make a great murder-mystery caper with them, as Lisa McGee (a fourth woman! If it ain't broke, don't fix it) has done with her new series How to Get to Heaven from Belfast.
Television
Television
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Boom time for anti-racist TV: how an 84 bottle of wine triggered an explosion in British broadcasting

Channel 4's 1980s commissioning led a radical era of British television that funded sustained, authentic multi-ethnic storytelling.
#jeffrey-epstein
fromIndependent
1 month ago
Film

'He was a f**king spy - there's 10 movies in this': Jim Sheridan on being mentioned in the Epstein files

fromIndependent
1 month ago
Film

'He was a f**king spy - there's ten movies in this': Jim Sheridan on being mentioned in the Epstein files

fromIndependent
1 month ago
Film

'He was a f**king spy - there's 10 movies in this': Jim Sheridan on being mentioned in the Epstein files

fromIndependent
1 month ago
Film

'He was a f**king spy - there's ten movies in this': Jim Sheridan on being mentioned in the Epstein files

fromIndependent
1 month ago

'How to Get to Heaven from Belfast' review: Smart, sharp, hilarious, gripping and wildly entertaining - a comedy thriller hit

There are plot twists galore, big laughs, big explosions and a gallery of wonderfully colourful supporting characters Imagine if the Derry Girls were Belfast girls in their late 30s and found themselves having to solve an eerie mystery involving the death of a former friend. That's a reasonable, bare-bones description of Lisa McGee's sparkling comedy-thriller How to Get to Heaven from Belfast (Netflix, from Thursday, February 12).
Television
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Watching James Bond play my great uncle Brendan in Giant was surreal and spooky | Sean Ingle

Prince Naseem Hamed rose from a prodigious, unconventional boxer trained by Brendan Ingle to world-class success; their strained relationship is dramatized in the film Giant.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Ian McKellen to star as LS Lowry in documentary revealing trove of unheard tapes

Unheard 1970s audio tapes of L.S. Lowry reveal intimate reflections; Sir Ian McKellen lip-syncs Lowry's voice in a BBC documentary fifty years after his death.
fromAnOther
1 month ago

My Father's Shadow: A Mesmeric Ode to Lost Childhood

Some years ago, Akinola Davies Jr received a short story written by his brother Wale, who was then living in Nigeria and working as a screenwriter for TV. The result of a writing exercise, Wale Davies's story was titled My Father's Shadow. "He sent it to me, really unprompted," Davies Jr remembers. "I cried, as you can imagine, because our father passed when we were really young. I would have been 20 months and I think he would have been about three years old." That story would become Davies Jr's Bafta-nominated debut feature My Father's Shadow, a magical portrait of two young brothers enjoying a rare day out in Lagos with their beloved, enigmatic father, told from the boys' perspective.
Film
fromCN Traveller
1 month ago

How the British countryside became 2026's breakout onscreen star

"On that bleak hill-top the earth was hard with a black frost, and the air made me shiver through every limb," so wrote Emily Brontë. In a story studded with untameable lust, unbreakable love, fierce tempers and shocking acts of revenge, perhaps the most faithful aspect of Emerald Fennell's latest film, "Wuthering Heights", to its 1847 novel is the tempestuous depiction of the remote English countryside. The Yorkshire moors, to be exact.
Film
Film
fromFilmmaker Magazine
2 months ago

A Tech Writer's Appreciation of Scott Macaulay

Digital technologies and the internet democratized filmmaking, enabling indie filmmakers with low-cost equipment and new distribution platforms, reshaping production, post-production, and exhibition.
#jessie-buckley
fromIndependent
2 months ago
Film

Donal Lynch: Jessie Buckley's Golden Globe and Oscar-worthiness flips the script on a very old Irish story

fromIndependent
2 months ago
Film

Donal Lynch: Jessie Buckley's Golden Globe and Oscar-worthiness flips the script on a very old Irish story

fromThe Independent
1 month ago

Danny Boyle sends 127 Hours superfan 'mindblowing' gift for watching film 1,000 times

I'm autistic and 127 Hours has been my special interest for nearly 15 years,
Film
Film
fromAnOther
2 months ago

Paul Mescal on The History of Sound, a Tender Romantic Drama

A tender love between Lionel and David unfolds through early-20th-century folk-song collecting, expressing intimacy beyond repression through shared music and field recordings.
fromIndependent
2 months ago

Why film and fiction is catching up to the stark reality of motherhood

Movies like Die My Love, starring Jennifer Lawrence, show an almost logical unravelling of a mum facing modern pressures
Film
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Utterly overwhelmed': British writer-director's short film earns Oscar nod

Lee Knight's 22-minute short A Friend of Dorothy, inspired by a real neighbour, earned an Oscar nomination for best live action short.
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

The Unknown: A Filmmaker's Search for Lost Connections

Filmmaker Simplice Ganou, from Burkina Faso, spends his time documenting people and relationships, but when he travels to Winterthur, Switzerland, he faces a new challenge: nobody wants to talk to him.
Film
fromColossal
2 months ago

Wade into Slow-Motion Suspension and Anticipation in the Radiant Film 'Divers'

Through the atmospheric lens of New York-based photographer Geordie Wood, a short film called " Divers " glimpses a day in the life of an elite high-diving camp. A moody yet bright setting evokes the way sun still glares when tucked behind clouds or glints off the surface water, and individuals are alternately silhouetted and spotlit by its glow. With cinematography by Adam Golfer and editing by Luke Lorentzen,
Film
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Peter Howden obituary

Peter Howden was a London independent cinema programmer and projectionist who shaped repertory programming with major tenures at the Everyman and the Rio.
Film
fromFilmmaker Magazine
2 months ago

My Best Work as (Mostly) an Editor

Laid-off after 11+ years, a career summarized through curated print archives, notable interviews, commissioning achievements, and comprehensive 35mm production indexing.
Film
fromIndependent
2 months ago

Chris Wasser: Another golden day for Ireland as Jessie Buckley's Oscar buzz is too loud to ignore

A Kerry actress is heavily favored to win Best Actress for Hamnet, while Ireland secured several 2026 Academy Award nominations following 2023's record 14.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

I'm so co-o-old': ahead of Wuthering Heights, the 20 best films with dreadful weather ranked!

Weather and environmental conditions often function as characters, shaping mood, isolation, and plot consequences across films.
fromOpen Culture
2 months ago

How the "Netflix Movie" Turns Cinema into "Visual Muzak"

A quarter-century later, it's safe to say that those days have come to an end. Not only does the streaming-only Netflix of the twenty-twenties no longer transmit movies on DVD through the mail (a service its younger users have trouble even imagining), it ranks approximately nowhere as a preferred cinephile destination. That has to do with a selection much diminished since the DVD days
Film
[ Load more ]