Headline Pictures

Headline Pictures
Private limited
Industry Film and television production
Founded January 2005.[1]
Founder
Headquarters London, England
Key people
  • Stewart Mackinnon
  • Christian Baute

Headline Pictures is a British film and television drama production company founded in 2005 by BAFTA nominee Stewart Mackinnon.[1][2]

The company has developed and produced film and television including The Man in the High Castle for Amazon Studios written by X-Files creator Frank Spotnitz, based on the classic novel by Philip K. Dick; the feature film Quartet, directed by Dustin Hoffman and distributed by The Weinstein Company; and feature film The Invisible Woman directed by Ralph Fiennes.[3]

History

Headline Pictures grew out of Trade Films,a Newcastle-based production company which made TV documentaries (including the Grierson Award-winning[4] The Miners' Campaign Video Tapes[5]) and TV drama between the mid-1970s and the mid-1990s,[6] and Common Features,[1] which produced award-winning films such as This Little Life, winning accolades such as the BANFF Award[7] and the Dennis Potter Award.[8]

Productions

Headline Pictures' first television mini series was Bag of Bones starring Pierce Brosnan, based on the book by Stephen King, which was filmed in Nova Scotia and premiered in 2011 on the A&E Network in the USA.[9]

In 2015 Headline Pictures produced the TV film Peter & Wendy: Based on the novel Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie, starring Stanley Tucci, Paloma Faith and Laura Fraser, written by BAFTA winner Adrian Hodges and directed by BAFTA winner Diarmuid Lawrence, produced in association with Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity for ITV over Christmas 2015[10]

Over the course of many years[11] Headline Pictures developed and finally produced, in partnership with Scott Free and Electric Shepherd Productions, The Man in the High Castle, a 10 part returning series for Amazon Studios based on the classic alternate history novel by Philip K. Dick.

In 2014 and 2015 Headline Pictures co-produced The Saboteurs, a six-episode TV miniseries which tells the story of the Nazi nuclear weapon project and the sabotage in Norway to disrupt it during The Second World War, with a particular emphasis on the role of Leif Tronstad, broadcast on More4 and across Europe.

Headline Pictures' films include Quartet, starring Dame Maggie Smith and Tom Courtenay, a British comedy about professional rivalry and lost love. It was released in 2012 and to date has grossed over $60 million worldwide.[12] It was written by Academy award winner Sir Ronald Harwood and was the directorial debut for Academy Award winning actor Dustin Hoffman. Other films include The Invisible Woman directed by Ralph Fiennes, starring Felicity Jones, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Tom Hollander, written by Abi Morgan, telling the story of the secret love affair between Charles Dickens and Nelly Ternan.

Headline Pictures is currently developing feature film Reykjavik, a drama about the Reagan/Gorbachev summit in Iceland in 1986 which effectively ended the Cold War;[13] and a TV series based on the Martin Cruz Smith Renko novels, adapted by Adrian Hodges[13][14]

Filmography

Television
Film

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.