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#Jamie Donoughue
thedoctorwhocompanion · 6 months
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It Sounds Like The Celestial Toymaker Isn't Beep the Meep's Boss (Unless David Tennant Is Lying)
It Sounds Like The Celestial Toymaker Isn't Beep the Meep's Boss (Unless David Tennant Is Lying) #DoctorWho
When The Star Beast aired, there was one main theory about who Beep the Meep’s mysterious “boss” is: the Toymaker, who will return to Doctor Who, this time played by Neil Patrick Harris, in this weekend’s The Giggle. But Fourteenth Doctor actor, David Tennant, seems to have quashed those rumours… As the Meep was being taken away by the Wrarth Warriors, he (as Russell T Davies referred to the…
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timespacegirls · 2 months
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the new doctor who episode titles just dropped!!
Space Babies (written by RTD, dir by Julie Anne Robinson)
The Devil's Chord (written by RTD, dir by Ben Chessell)
Boom (written by Moffat, dir by Julie Anne Robinson)
73 Yards (written by RTD, dir by Dylan Holmes Williams)
Dot and Bubble (written by RTD, dir by Dylan Holmes Williams)
Rogue (written by Kate Herron and Briony Redman, dir by Ben Chessell)
The Legend of Ruby Sunday (written by RTD, dir by Jamie Donoughue)
Empire of Death (written by RTD, dir by Jamie Donoughue)
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pers-books · 2 months
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As Doctor Who gears up for its global premiere this May, the episode titles have now been revealed for the season, as well as a guest star who has jumped aboard the TARDIS for the upcoming season.
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DOCTOR WHO – EPISODE TITLES
Space Babies: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Julie Anne Robinson
The Devil’s Chord: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Ben Chessell
Boom: Written by Steven Moffat, directed by Julie Anne Robinson
73 Yards: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Dylan Holmes Williams
Dot and Bubble: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Dylan Holmes Williams
Rogue: Written by Kate Herron and Briony Redman, directed by Ben Chessell
The Legend of Ruby Sunday: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Jamie Donoughue
Empire of Death: Written by Russell T Davies, directed by Jamie Donoughue
Joining Ncuti Gatwa and Millie Gibson in the Julie Anne Robinson directed 'Space Babies', is Golda Rosheuvel (Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story) who joins Doctor Who as Jocelyn, who the Doctor and Ruby collide with, in their first adventure in the TARDIS together.
Russell T Davies, Showrunner said:
It’s been amazing to see the whole world appreciate Golda’s talents, because of Bridgerton, and it’s been an absolute joy to invite her to Cardiff to help launch Ncuti and Millie’s first season.
Rounding out the explosive double bill is previously announced Jinkx Monsoon who stars in ‘The Devil’s Chord’, the Doctor’s most powerful enemy yet. In this episode, the Doctor and Ruby step back to the sixties to meet The Beatles.
New episodes will then debut weekly across BBC iPlayer, BBC One and outside of the UK on Disney+ (where available), with the Steven Moffat penned adventure ‘Boom’ up next, followed by ‘73 Yards’, ‘Dot and Bubble’, ‘Rogue’, and a massive two-part finale spread across two weeks titled ‘The Legend of Ruby Sunday’ and ‘Empire of Death’.
Over the rest of the season there are an array of brilliant guest stars jumping aboard the TARDIS, including Callie Cooke, Dame Siân Phillips, Alexander Devrient, Bhav Joshi, Majid Mehdizadeh-Valoujerdy, Tachia Newall and Caoilinn Springall. They join the previously announced guest cast: Michelle Greenidge, Angela Wynter, Anita Dobson, Aneurin Barnard, Yasmin Finney, Jonathan Groff, Gwïon Morris Jones, Bonnie Langford, Genesis Lynea, Jemma Redgrave, Lenny Rush and Indira Varma.
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mndvx · 2 months
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DOCTOR WHO — THE LEGEND OF RUBY SUNDAY (S40E07) Writer: Russell T Davies, Director: Jamie Donoughue
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angel-and-the-serpent · 2 months
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ALL WE KNOW ABOUT DR WHO 2024
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-Trailer released today DR WHO 2024 TITLES 1. SPACE BABIES-Written by RTD, Directed by Julie Anne Robinson 2. THE DEVIL'S CHORD-Written by RTD, Directed by Ben Chessell (i think this is the musical/60s episode) 3. BOOM-Written by Steven Moffat, Directed by Julie Anne Robinson 4. 73 YARDS-Written by RTD, Directed by Dylan Holmes Williams 5. DOT AND BUBBLE-Written by RTD, Directed by Dylan Holmes Williams 6. ROGUE-Written by Kate Herron and Briony Redman, Directed by Ben chessell (I think this is the Bridgerton-like episode) 7. THE LEGEND OF RUBY SUNDAY-Written by RTD, Directed by Jaime Donoughue 8. EMPIRE OF DEATH - Written by RTD, Directed by Jamie donoughue (the title is on The Tardis, where it usually says police box-war episode?)
NEW GUEST CAST EP. 1- Golda Rosheuvel- (queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton story) as Jocelyn EP.2- Jinkx Monsoon UNKNOWN EPISODE NEW CAST Callie Cooke, Dame Siân Phillips, Alexander Devrient, Bhav Joshi, Majid Mehdizadeh-Valoujerdy, Tachia Newall and Caoilinn Springall. PREVIOUSLY ANNOUNCED GUEST CAST Michelle Greenidge, Angela Wynter, Anita Dobson, Aneurin Barnard, Yasmin Finney, Jonathan Groff, Gwïon Morris Jones, Bonnie Langford, Genesis Lynea, Jemma Redgrave, Lenny Rush and Indira Varma.
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everelore · 2 years
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A Discovery of Witches → Episode #3.6 dir. Jamie Donoughue
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tvsotherworlds · 11 months
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endeavourfiles · 5 years
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THINGS ARE ABOUT TO GET REAL
ITV Magazine - January 2019
Fans of the nostalgic detective series are in for a treat on Sunday evenings as an approaching new decade is marked by Seventies moustaches and more aggressive policing. Buckle in… Endeavour is back
There’s something going down in the heart of Oxford. Around the corner comes Police Chief Superintendent Reginald Bright, hugging the limestone wall. He’s followed by a menacing-looking man in a trench coat, who withdraws a bladed weapon. At the other end of the street is another thug with a bulbous nose and peaked cap. For fans of Endeavour, ITV’s prequel to Inspector Morse, things are about to get very real.
‘It’s like a cowboy shoot-out’, grins Anton Lesser, the actor who plays Bright, as passers-by on bicycles weave around the crew. To say more about Bright’s fate would constitute spoiler territory but, suffice to say, the sixth season of Endeavour offers a major sea-change for the law-enforcers of Oxford City Police CID. The year is 1969 and a new decade is fast approaching.
‘At the end of last season, we all go our separate ways’, explains a suited-and-booted Shaun Evans, the actor who has effortlessly slipped into John Thaw’s brogues to become our eponymous hero, the younger Endeavour Morse. For those in need of a recap, Icarus, the final episode of season five, saw the announcement that Cowley Police Station was set to close, with the dissolution of the Oxford City Police and merger with Thames Valley Constabulary.
‘The idea was to ring the changes with a creative refresh’, admits producer Deanne Cunningham. ‘Certainly, in episode one, viewers will find it’s quite different from where we left them. Everybody’s torn asunder, in separate places’. With all left reeling after the death of DC George Fancy, DS Morse is back in uniform (now complete with a Seventies ‘tache) overseeing a country police station in the ‘one-horse town’, as Shaun puts it, of Woodstock.
Bright, meanwhile, has been reduced to organizing traffic. ‘It’s a come-down for him. His authority is undermined’, says Anton. He also has changes in his personal life, with viewers introduced to Mrs. Bright (Carol Royle) after years of veiled references to her.
‘Everything in his world is reversing and collapsing, and therefore becoming much more interesting and complex’, he continues. ‘It’s what I’ve been waiting for years! I’ve been saying, “Let’s see a bit more of the man behind the uniform.” I think audiences love that: to see into the characters they’ve become familiar with.’
Then there’s Morse’s boss DCI Fred Thursday – played by Roger Allam – who has been moved to the new police station, a brutal concrete structure. ‘He’s been bumped down a rank’, says Roger, who arrives to chat after finishing his scenes for the day. ‘Things are not good in Thursday land.’
The old-school copper must adjust to working with new boss DI Ronnie Box, played by Simon Harrison, ‘an aggressive Sweeney-type’, says Roger, in what feels like an oblique nod to John Thaw, who made his name in 1970s show The Sweeney. Together with his junior, DS Alan Jago (Richard Riddell), Box represents ‘a different way of policing’, says  Deanne, ‘rough and ready – Flying-Squad style. It’s anathema to Morse and Fred.’
There’s no question, this four-episode season of Endeavour is straying into darker territory.
With the whole production for series six spanning 20 weeks, there are just 13 days to go now on the fourth and final episode that we’re here to witness being filmed. Directed by Oscar-nominated Jamie Donoughue (Shok), it’s another story that reflects real-life history, namely that of Ronan Point, a tower block in East London that collapsed in 1968, killing four people and injuring 17. After the first episode sees a tower block being erected, this final film shows a catastrophic consequence (requiring some complex visual effects). ‘It’s an epic story’, says Deanne.
‘Within the block, we find a body that has been there for a year, which has a connection to a body we find at the beginning of the series’, says Shaun. ‘It’s a good way to round up and bring back all the characters we’ve introduced this season.’
Technology is rushing headlong into Endeavour’s world. In the new police station, there is a computer. ‘In ’69, Thames Valley did actually have a very early collating computer’, explains Paul Cripps, Endeavour’s set designer. The production borrowed one from the Centre for Computing History in Cambridge. ‘It’s about the size of a small upright piano.’ There are other innovations too – not least a vending machine that causes Thursday some bother.
Does this gradual move into the Seventies mean there will be a seventh season in the offing, with Endeavour team joining the dots ever closer towards the Eighties Inspector Morse? ‘When you’re coming towards the end of a project, you need to have a period of peace away from it, to allow the experience to settle’, says Shaun coyly. ‘Who knows…?’ In the meantime, there’s a wonderful sixth season to relish.
The sixth series of Endeavour will return in February on ITV.
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filmstopia · 7 years
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The Last Kingdom - Official Trailer 2015 Series 1 - BBC
New Post has been published on http://filmstopia.com/action/the-last-kingdom-official-trailer-2015-series-1-bbc/
The Last Kingdom - Official Trailer 2015 Series 1 - BBC
The year is 872, and many of the separate kingdoms of what we now know as England have fallen to the invading Danes, leaving the great kingdom of Wessex standing alone and defiant under the command of King Alfred. Against this turbulent backdrop lives our hero, Uhtred. Born the son of a Saxon nobleman, he is captured by the Danes and raised as one of their own. Forced to choose between the country of his birth and the people of his upbringing, his loyalties are ever tested. What is he? Saxon or Dane? On a quest to reclaim his birthright, Uhtred must tread a dangerous path between both sides if he is to play his part in the birth of a new nation and, ultimately, recapture his ancestral lands.
Directed by: Peter Hoar, Anthony Byrne, Ben Chanan, Nick Murphy, Jamie Donoughue, Jon East, Richard Senior Cast: Alexander Dreymon, Ian Hart, David Dawson
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rogerverhoeven · 3 years
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SHOK from Jamie Donoughue on Vimeo.
Oscar® Nominated & Multi Festival Award Winning Short Film.
The friendship of two young boys is tested to its limits as the battle for survival during the Kosovo War.
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mndvx · 2 months
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DOCTOR WHO — EMPIRE OF DEATH (S40E08) Writer: Russell T Davies, Director: Jamie Donoughue
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tmnotizie · 5 years
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ASCOLI PICENO – Il 9 Novembre si celebrerà un’importante ricorrenza: saranno trascorsi trent’anni dalla caduta del muro di Berlino, un evento centrale per le successive trasformazioni politiche, economiche e sociali del continente europeo. Per l’occasione, ad Ascoli Piceno, è sorto un nuovo Festival Internazionale del Cinema, significativamente intitolato “Corti di lunga memoria”, che ha raccolto più di cinquecento cortometraggi da oltre sessanta Paesi sul tema generale “Memoria storica e tradizione culturale”.
Il Festival, che si terrà nelle giornate di Giovedì 7, Venerdì 8 e Sabato 9 Novembre, è organizzato da un Istituto Scolastico, l’ISC L. Luciani di Ascoli della Dirigente Vincenza Agostini, vincitore del bando di concorso “Cinema per la scuola: buone pratiche, rassegne e festival”, indetto e sostenuto dal Ministero dell’istruzione, dell’istruzione e della ricerca e dal Ministero dei beni e delle attività culturali.
Obiettivo primario del Festival, diretto artisticamente da Alberto De Angelis, è mettere in comunicazione Scuola e Cinema, due realtà con strutture organizzative molto differenti, ma che coesisteranno felicemente nella programmazione di questa iniziativa, realizzata insieme alla Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Ascoli Piceno.
I cortometraggi in concorso rappresentano il meglio della cinematografia europea ed internazionale: due candidati ai premi Oscar (Shok, di Jamie Donoughue, sulla guerra in Kosovo; Skin, di Guy Nattiv, sull’odio razziale), diversi corti in selezione ufficiale a Cannes, numerose opere candidate e premiate ai David di Donatello e ai Nastri d’Argento.
La giuria, che ha valutato le opere in concorso, è composta da preparati e referenziati nomi dell’industria cinematografica italiana ed internazionale, che impreziosicono ulteriormente questa prima edizione di un Festival che ha tanti elementi di originalità nel panorama festivaliero italiano ed internazionale: la stretta connessione tra Scuola e il Cinema, la scelta di essere un Festival tematico che accoglie rilevanti spunti civili e culturali, la volontà di intessere un dialogo intergenerazionale nel coinvolgimento degli spettatori più giovani, gli studenti, e delle fasce di pubblico più adulte, la cittadinanza tutta di Ascoli Piceno.
La città, che da sempre soffre di un isolamente geografico per la sua penalizzante posizione nell’entroterra, lontana dalle vie di comunicazione più agili e battute, ha l’occasione, attraverso questa manifestazione, di intessere un fecondo dialogo con tutta l’Europa e di aprirsi ad orizzonti nuovi: sulle spalle del suo passato, per guardare meglio al suo futuro.
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everelore · 2 years
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A Discovery of Witches → Episode #3.1 dir. Jamie Donoughue
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ryugakunikki · 7 years
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April 21, 2017 at 05:19PM
RT @toby_regbo: Shout out to Jamie Donoughue who directed ep 6 and the camera team for creating that epic 'one-er'. https://t.co/9FJquv7LMF
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pan-do-mim · 7 years
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Shok -arkadaş
Yönetmen: Jamie Donoughue
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bluecollarfilm · 6 years
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The Innocents (2018)
June's adventure starting a new life in London becomes a LOT more complicated than she could have ever expected. Suddenly she finds herself the subject of a kidnap plot, their intentions unknown. Faced with extreme stress her body and identity begin to shift in ways she could have never imagined. The question is not just how... but why?
Directed by:   Jamie Donoughue, Farren Blackburn
Starring:   Sorcha Groundsell, Percelle Ascott, Guy Pearce, Johannes Haukur Johannesson
Release date:   August 24, 2018
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