Dangerous Parking: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 06:58, 21 March 2008
Dangerous Parking | |
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Directed by | Peter Howitt |
Written by | Peter Howitt |
Produced by | Richard L. Johns |
Starring | Peter Howitt, Saffron Burrows, Sean Pertwee, Rachael Stirling, Tom Conti, Alice Evans |
Cinematography | Zoran Veljkovic |
Edited by | David Barrett |
Music by | Andre Barreau |
Release date | 2007 |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Dangerous Parking is a 2007 drama film based on the book of the same by Stuart Browne.
Based on the critically-acclaimed novel by the late Stuart Browne, Dangerous Parking tells the story of Noah Arkwright, a cult director in the indie film world, whose life is on a crash course, with Noah steering himself towards his own destruction. Noah's life is one of success - and excess. Everything - drink, drugs, girls, fame - that Noah can get his hands on he wolfs down with an insatiable hunger.
Alcoholism and drug addiction have him firmly in their grasp - but Noah has no interest in acknowledging either until Kirstin, a young alcoholic who has 'seen the light', manages to convince Noah that he is heading for destruction and sets him on the path to reclaim himself.
With the help of his best friend Ray, Noah attempts to right his ship - and when fate sends him a guardian angel in the shape of cellist Clare Mathesson, Noah tries even harder to shift his focus from self abuse to self preservation - and on the road to selflessness. And that is when Mother Nature deals him the cruelest blow of all.
Peter Howitt adapted the novel into a screenplay and directed the film - which Richard Johns produced.
Principal photography was completed on Nov 15th 2006 and the film was completed in May 2007.
Main Cast
- Peter Howitt — Noah Arkwright
- Saffron Burrows — Claire Matteson
- Sean Pertwee — Ray Molina
- Rachael Stirling — Kirstin
- Tom Conti — Doc Baker
- Alice Evans — Etta
- Victor McGuire — Harry
Awards
- Tokyo International Film Festival (2007) - Best Director - Peter Howitt [1]
External links
- ^ Tokyo International Film Festival official site, last accessed November 21, 2007