![]() | |
Industry | Film, television |
---|---|
Founded | Edinburgh, United Kingdom (2010) |
Headquarters | Edinburgh and Glasgow |
Key people | Felipe Bustos Sierra |
Website | debasers |
Debasers Filums Ltd is a film and video production company with offices in Edinburgh and Glasgow. The company name is derived from the song Debaser by the band The Pixies, a favourite of Debasers founder Felipe Bustos Sierra; filums is deliberately misspelt.
The company has produced several short films, including Tixeon (2010), Three-Legged Horses (2012), and Five Six Seven Eight (2012). [1] [2] Three-Legged Horses was the first successfully crowdfunded film project in Scotland, and went on to screen at over 100 international film festivals, on five continents, winning four awards. [3]
Nae Pasaran , their first feature-length film, was directed and produced by Felipe Bustos Sierra. It was based on an earlier 2013 short film by the same name, funded through the Scottish Documentary Institute's Bridging the Gap programme. [4] The film won the Best Feature award at the 2018 British Academy Scotland Awards and Sierra was shortlisted for the Best Director (Factual) award. [5] It was also shortlisted in the Best Documentary category in the 2018 British Independent Film Awards. [6] The film won the Audience Prize at the San Sebastian Human Rights Film Festival in April 2019. [7] The film was first broadcast on the new BBC Scotland channel's first day on air, 24 February 2019. [8]
"They shall not pass" is a slogan used to express determination to defend a position against an enemy.
The British Independent Film Awards (BIFA) is an organisation that celebrates, supports and promotes British independent cinema and filmmaking talent in United Kingdom. Nominations for the annual awards ceremony are announced in early November, with the ceremony itself taking place in early December.
David Mackenzie is a Scottish film director and co-founder of the Glasgow-based production company Sigma Films. He has made ten feature films including Young Adam (2003), Hallam Foe (2007), Perfect Sense (2011) and Starred Up (2013). In 2016, Mackenzie's film Hell or High Water premiered at Cannes and was theatrically released in the United States in August. In October 2016, Mackenzie boarded Damnation - a TV pilot for Universal & USA Network. Mackenzie also directed Outlaw King (2018), a historical film for Netflix.
Ronald Paul Wilson is a filmmaker, magician and author. He lives and works between London, Los Angeles, and his home in Scotland.
Andrew and Jeremy Get Married is a 2004 British documentary film written and directed by Don Boyd for the BBC. It tells the story of two Englishmen, Andrew Thomas and Jeremy Trafford, as they plan for their commitment ceremony. Originally commissioned for the BBC Storyville series, the film premiered at the 2004 Toronto International Film Festival.
Justin Edgar is a British film director, screenwriter and producer.
Sarah Gavron is a British film director. She has directed four short films, and three feature films. Her first film was This Little Life (2003), later followed by Brick Lane (2007) and Village at the End of the World (2012). Her film, Suffragette (2015) is based in the London of 1912 and tells the story of the Suffragette movement based on realistic historical events. Her most recent film is Rocks which she directed in a creative collaboration with the team and young cast. Rocks premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and opened in cinemas in 2020.
Chilean cinema refers to all films produced in Chile or made by Chileans, it had its origins at the start of the 20th century with the first Chilean film screening in 1902 and the first Chilean feature film appearing in 1910. The oldest surviving feature is El Húsar de la Muerte (1925), and the last silent film was Patrullas de Avanzada (1931). The Chilean film industry struggled in the late 1940s and in the 1950s, despite some box-office successes such as El Diamante de Maharajá. The 1960s saw the development of the "New Chilean Cinema", with films like Three Sad Tigers (1968), Jackal of Nahueltoro (1969) and Valparaíso mi amor (1969). After the 1973 military coup, film production was low, with many filmmakers working in exile. It increased after the end of the Pinochet regime in 1989, with occasional critical and/or popular successes such as Johnny cien pesos (1993), Historias de Fútbol (1997) and Gringuito (1998).
Umoja, the Village Where Men Are Forbidden is a French documentary film about the Kenyan village of Umoja, directed by Jean Crousillac and Jean-Marc Sainclair and released in 2009.
Sponsume was an online multicurrency crowd funding platform founded by French entrepreneur Gregory Vincent in 2010. Its headquarters are in London, United Kingdom. It stopped crowd funding services in 2014.
Jeanie Finlay is a British artist and filmmaker from Stockton-on-Tees. Her work includes the film made embedded on the final season of the HBO show Game of Thrones - The Last Watch, Seahorse: The Dad who Gave Birth Bifa winning Orion: The Man Who Would Be King, Panto!, Bifa and Grierson-nominated The Great Hip Hop Hoax and Sound it Out, a documentary about the last record store in Teesside which was the official film of Record Store Day. The film was an early successful example of crowdfunding, having been rejected by the BBC.
Rossana Lacayo de Herguedas known professionally as Rossana Lacayo is a Nicaraguan photographer, scriptwriter, and filmmaker. She is considered a pioneer of Nicaraguan cinema as stated by the Nicaraguan Cultural Institute. In 2003 she founded Gota Films (Nicaragua) an independent film company. She is a member of ANCI. Lacayo resides in Nicaragua with her family.
Graham Hughes is a Scottish film director. He is possibly best known for his directorial work on the film A Practical Guide to a Spectacular Suicide.
I Love Her is a 2013 Ukrainian drama short film directed by Darya Perelay. It is the first Ukrainian movie about a lesbian relationship and is one of the first LGBT films produced in Ukraine.
Konstantin Friedrich Flemig is an award-winning German director of documentary films.
Josh O'Connor is an English actor. He is known for his portrayal of Prince Charles in seasons 3 and 4 of the Netflix drama The Crown, for which he was nominated for a British Academy Television Award for Best Supporting Actor. He is also known for his portrayal of Johnny Saxby in the 2017 film God's Own Country, directed by Francis Lee, for which he won a British Independent Film Award for Best Actor, and for his portrayal of Lawrence Durrell in the ITV series The Durrells. He also appeared as Marius in BBC One's miniseries of Victor Hugo's novel Les Misérables.
Ray & Liz is a 2018 British drama film written and directed by Richard Billingham in his feature debut. The film retells Billingham's troubled childhood growing up in a Black Country council flat during the Thatcher era. It focuses "on his parents Ray and Liz, their relationship, and its impact on Richard and his younger brother Jason." Billingham, a photographer, previously published the book Ray's a Laugh (1996), with photographs of his family at the time depicted in the film.
Felipe Bustos Sierra is a Chilean-Belgian film director, producer and editor based in Scotland. His debut feature-length documentary, Nae Pasaran (2018), won the Best Feature award at the 2018 British Academy Scotland Awards, where Sierra was also nominated for Best Director (Factual). Sierra is also the founder and creative director of Debasers Filums, an independent film company based in Edinburgh and Glasgow.
Mahalia Belo is an English film and television director.
Nae Pasaran is a 2018 documentary directed by Felipe Bustos Sierra about a group of workers at a Rolls-Royce factory in East Kilbride, Scotland, who refused to work on Chilean Air Force parts from 1974-78 due to the atrocities carried out in Chile by the Pinochet dictatorship. The feature-length film was based on an earlier 2013 short film by the same name, funded through the Scottish Documentary Institute's Bridging the Gap programme. The film was the last programme broadcast on the new BBC Scotland channel's first day on air and was rebroadcast on the same channel on 4 May and 20 October 2019 and on 21 November 2020.
![]() | This article about a British film distributor or production company is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |