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We Are the Freaks

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Director
  
Justin Edgar

Music director
  
Vincent Watts

Duration
  

Country
  
United Kingdom

4.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Comedy

Screenplay
  
Justin Edgar

Writer
  
Justin Edgar

Language
  
English

We Are the Freaks movie poster

Release date
  
22 June 2013 (2013-06-22) (Edinburgh International Film Festival)

Initial release
  
April 25, 2014 (United Kingdom)

Cast
  
Michael Smiley
(Killer Colin),
Amber Anderson
(Elinor),
Jamie Blackley
(Jack),
Rosamund Hanson
(Clare),
Hera Hilmar
(Iona),
Mike Bailey
(Parsons)

Similar movies
  
Jamie Blackley appears in We Are the Freaks and Vinyl

We are the freaks uk trailer 2013 british comedy hd


We Are the Freaks is a 2013 United Kingdom film written, produced and directed by Justin Edgar. It's a surreal and anarchic anti-teen film about three misfits having the night of their lives. It stars Jamie Blackley, Michael Smiley, Sean Teale, Amber Anderson, Rosamund Hanson and Adam Gillen. The film premiered at the 2013 Edinburgh International Film Festival in official competition for the Michael Powell Award. It is set in November 1990 against the backdrop of Margaret Thatcher's resignation.

Contents

We Are the Freaks movie scenes

We are the freaks official trailer 2014 sean teale mike bailey jamie blackley


Cast

We Are the Freaks httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

  • Jamie Blackley as Jack
  • Sean Teale as Chunks
  • Mike Bailey as Parsons
  • Michael Smiley as Killer Colin
  • Amber Anderson as Elinor
  • Rosamund Hanson as Clare
  • Adam Gillen as Splodger
  • Production

    We Are the Freaks We Are The Freaks DVD Review

    Edgar wrote, directed and produced the film. He describes it as "A film about growing up in Birmingham" The script was derived from old home movies he had made with friends when he was 18 and 19. He states "I’ve still got the tapes at home and they are quite funny.” Regarding the period setting he states “I wanted to set it 20 years ago because I think you need that distance, like American Graffiti and Quadrophenia did, otherwise your film can age very quickly". He states he wanted the film to have a scrappy feel as though it came from the head of a teenager.

    We Are the Freaks We Are The Freaks extended clip YouTube

    The film was shot on location and edited entirely in the city of Birmingham, something that Edgar is very proud of. According to Edgar the film was shot in 15 days on a tight budget in March 2012. He shot little coverage so was able to edit very quickly, having a selling cut ready in about a week. the film was bought for UK distribution by Metrodome following its UK premiere at the Edinburgh Film Festival.

    We Are the Freaks We Are The Freaks Official Trailer YouTube

    Edgar views the film as highly political and says he was inspired to write it by the 2010 United Kingdom student protests "As I was writing the student riots happened and then the summer riots and the period when I was 20 in 1990 seemed to have a lot of resonance for modern youth". "Thatcher had a huge impact on this country. I’d compare her to Franco, Salazar or De Gaulle. I think there should be a real examination of that period by more serious minded films than this one and its a shame there isn’t yet."

    Release

    We Are the Freaks We Are the Freaks 2014 The Movie Database TMDb

    The film was released in UK cinemas on 24 April 2014 and has also sold to Germany, the United States, Canada, Luxumbourg, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium and the Netherlands.

    Critical response

    We Are the Freaks We Are The Freaks WeAreTheFreaks1 Twitter

    The film's cast was praised by Allan Hunter writing in Screen Daily, who stated that the film is a "Likeable breezy British teen comedy" that "offers a fantastic showcase for a talented, charismatic young cast who make the most of the script’s jocular wit", while Guy Lodge, writing for Variety, described the film as "amusing, appealingly performed and sensibly brief" Andrew Blair, reviewing for Den of Geek, gave the film four stars and thought it able to "provide the most successful representation of male teenagers I've seen at this festival" he went on to note the films political resonance and that "It has a lot of anger bubbling under its surface"

    We Are the Freaks Justin Edgars We Are The Freaks heading to US News Screen

    The film's style was praised by Catherine Bray in Time Out, who thought that "the strength of ‘We Are the Freaks’ is that it never feels like a cookie-cutter teen movie" and that it had "raw energy that allows its lack of polish and occasional tonal missteps to come over as endearing".

    References

    We Are the Freaks Wikipedia
    We Are the Freaks IMDb We Are the Freaks themoviedb.org