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-   -   the Chris Morris appreciation thread (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=21855)

sarramkrop 11.19.2008 06:41 PM

thanks for that.

sarramkrop 05.28.2009 05:39 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZAnj1pEcuw
i hadn't seen this before

Keeping It Simple 05.28.2009 05:42 PM

He ain't all that.

This Is Not Here 05.28.2009 06:50 PM

Ha ha, it's awesome. "Part your belief curtains"!

This Is Not Here 05.28.2009 06:53 PM

Have you seen this one? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIE3e9JtI_0&NR=1

demonrail666 05.28.2009 06:59 PM

Yeah that Tatchell thing is pretty insane. Were there legal wranglings over it?

This Is Not Here 05.28.2009 07:06 PM

I don't think anyone would ever have the balls to actually sue Chris Morris.

demonrail666 05.28.2009 07:07 PM

i was thinking about tatchell. i mean he does basically out portillo there.

the ikara cult 05.28.2009 07:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sarramkrop


"Just take away the rubber hose"

thanks for that :)

demonrail666 05.28.2009 07:13 PM

i love the way morris pronounces 'david su-ll-ivan' exactly the way sullivan himself says it.

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 12:08 AM

Yeah the Tatchell one is hilarious too.

Four Lions, plus On The Hour CD Release
by Neil on April 09, 2009, 08:54:09 AM
Well, I'm really behind here, very sorry about that. Since the last update, in case you aren't aware, there's been some news on the forthcoming 'Chris Morris suicide bomber thing' - which now has a working title of Four Lions. You can find a full archive of the emails that have been sent out from Warp Films in this thread. The long and short of it is that Morris has now seemingly recieved enough funding support that he won't need to rely on the fanbase to send in their 25 quids. Here's the very latest email, which was sent out yesterday:

Quote
Subject: FUNDED
Date: Wednesday, 8 April, 2009 11:18 AM
From: "Funding Mentalist"

Hello

Due to this week’s final confirmation on our funding, your chance to be in the film has just become more real... no specifics yet but it might be worth getting yourself physically fit over the summer. We may need you to do some running on camera this autumn (to cut into our shots from the london marathon last year).

This last word on our financing means we can move from faith to reality and actually start putting together a full team over the next few months. Rewrites continue. There have been meetings about posters(this seems to be far more important than actually getting the film cast, written and shot). Location planning reports are good - we are currently focused on the Alps for Pakistan.

More news when the work kicks in. Meanwhile go and see In The Loop. Chris has been banging on about it since xmas & says it is "very funny" and had him laughing "in three different registers".


DS
http://chilled.cream.org/index.php

This Is Not Here 05.29.2009 12:12 AM

Is that from the cookedandbombed (or whatever it's called) fansite?

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 12:15 AM

Yes, that site is a bit chaotic. Did you go to watch 'In The Loop'?

This Is Not Here 05.29.2009 12:16 AM

Nope, what is it?

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 12:20 AM

It's Armando Iannucci's latest movie, based on his 'thick of it' tv series. It made me laugh throughout.

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 12:22 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=reTHiReUNo4

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 12:28 AM

Chris Morris - REM Parody

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLAulSXnvo4

hahaha

This Is Not Here 05.29.2009 12:38 AM

Oh that is brilliant. Is it still at cinemas?

sarramkrop 05.29.2009 01:14 AM

it should be.

stu666 05.29.2009 01:45 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpjQx2xjy-Y

Time Trumpet is out on dvd now

 

Lurker 05.30.2009 06:42 AM

I recently got the BrassEye dvd. Great stuff.

jimbrim 01.22.2010 08:18 PM

here's an exclusive clip from the new feature length
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/video...lions-sundance

stu666 01.23.2010 05:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimbrim
here's an exclusive clip from the new feature length
http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/video...lions-sundance


hahaha, this looks good, i've been waiting for it for so long now.

knox 01.23.2010 08:03 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LNZM78aXWh4

jon boy 01.23.2010 01:04 PM

i really wanna see this new film. will have to wait for a while until its internet ready as i very much doubt it will get over here any time soon.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiS7Q...eature=related

Genteel Death 02.21.2010 05:28 AM

Chris Morris and the Roar of "Four Lions"

By Bilge Ebiri on 02/01/2010



Chris Morris on the set of "Four Lions," Warp Films, 2010

Perhaps one of the most unusual sights of the Sundance Film Festival was seeing British comedy legend Chris Morris walking around and doing Q&As after screenings of his "jihadi comedy" "Four Lions." Infamous in Britain for his shows "The Day Today" (which helped launch the career of Steve Coogan) and "Brass Eye," Morris is generally regarded as something of a recluse, and rarely gives interviews.
Not that he's shy. Dear god, no. To say that Morris's work has flirted with controversy is a bit of an understatement: A "Brass Eye" TV special he once did on the pedophilia scare reportedly broke records for complaints it generated. And back in early 2002, he penned, with fellow Brit satirist and "In the Loop" director Armando Iannucci, "Six Months that Changed a Year," an "absolute atrocity special" satirizing the response to 9/11.
Telling the story of a group of hapless terrorists plotting a coordinated suicide bombing, Morris's feature directorial debut "Four Lions" takes his work in a decidedly new direction. The kind of film that can use someone blowing themselves to bits as a punchline for a gag, "Lions'" tone is darkly ironic rather than confrontational. It's also the product of years of scrupulous research, which resulted in a surprising degree of cooperation from the British Muslim community. During his visit to Sundance, I spoke to Morris about bending genres, preferring Howard Stern to Jon Stewart, and the psyche of suicide bombers.
This film is a very strange hybrid -- it's got a lot of broad comedy, but it's also very serious and tragic in some regards.
I think the appropriate word for it is "tragicomedy." If you just made a film that said, "Guys making these kinds of plots are ridiculous," you'd be lying. After the research I did, which included going to court cases and talking to loads of people, I wanted to convey the point that a terrorist could also be a humorously flawed person. But the companion thought to that is, of course, they're also people, which in itself is subversive to the notion of what a terrorist is. A lot of films I like bend genres as well. "Dr. Strangelove" is really a half hour thriller stretched out to give you enough time to include lots of comic routines. If you look at the film, the seriousness of the mechanics of what's going on -- the assault on the airbase, the detail inside the airplane -- that's definitely transgenre. Those could be outtakes from a serious war film. And I think comedy can be left frivolously flapping about on the high tide end if it doesn't dig in somewhere.
Story continues below

ADVERTISMENT



In some ways, this is a much darker film than "In the Loop," which, despite being about the run-up to a war, makes it quite easy to sit back and watch and enjoy without feeling at all uncomfortable.
I absolutely adore "In the Loop" -- I laughed from beginning to end -- but it's affirmative, basically. It's a universal rallying cry to say, "Fuck politicians!" and "Aren't they a bunch of conniving gits?" It's never going to rip the carpet off from under your feet. There's nothing wrong with that, of course, 'cause I'm fairly intolerant of stuff that calls itself comedy. How rare is it to laugh at all at a film that calls itself a comedy, let alone to laugh all the way through?
Some would say that satire is a dead art nowadays.
There's satire out there. "South Park" is satirical. "Team America" is pretty satirical of genre. But satire in itself, as a raw element, can be pretty dull. "Dr. Strangelove" could be dull without some sparked up performances and its beautiful tone. I actually do think satire can get formulaic: "It's a satire so I don't really have to have any jokes." There's a certain Route 1 satire shape you can fall into, and I'm really concerned about that, actually. It's a formula that is given too much license.
For example, I prefer Howard Stern to Jon Stewart

Genteel Death 02.21.2010 05:32 AM

There's something innately, intuitively subversive about his take on things. Really, really funny, without rules. You wouldn't call it satire -- I'd say it's better than satire. And I often think of films as comedies when they're not comedies. "Festen (The Celebration)," I thought, was very funny. It had much more value, because it kicked hard. Whereas something that comes along and says, "Hi, I'm a comedy," like "Tropic Thunder," makes me want to rip up the whole cinema -- just a godawful waste of money and time.

Genteel Death 02.21.2010 05:41 AM

Tell me about the ''fatwa-proof research'' that you did for 'Four Lions''.
That's an unfortunate non-quote that's being spread around. It's attributed to my producer, but I'm pretty sure it's a journalistic product. I did do a lot of research. I wanted to make sure the scenarios in the film came from a real place. I met lots of Muslims who had nothing to do with anything radical whatsoever, which gave me a fair sense of how the landscape lay in Britain, and all the differences between the different village communities that ended up in different mill towns. That puts into sharp relief what happens in these tiny radical pockets. Making this film [had] nothing to do with attacking the Koran or casting aspersions about the Prophet or anything like that. 99.99% of the people I met shared those precious things but weren't remotely interested in blowing up anyone.
I was impressed that the film also didn't offer up a list of grievances -- some obligatory, politically correct scene where we see all the horrible things that the West has done in Muslim countries, or something like that.
There are works of fiction which seek to explain jihadi terrorists as the militant wing of Amnesty International. I don't buy that. I wanted to avoid it for dramatic reasons as well. I didn't want some scene where Omar was confronted with terrible footage from an Afghani school that had been blown up by a drone or something. In a way, that would be too specific. We know that this sort of thing happens, of course. I thought with all the characters you could basically pick up why each of them would be involved with this and to categorize them. The "Black Widows" [Chechen female suicide bombers in Russia] were very different than some lads in Surrey planning to blow up a nightclub, for example. And it's not fair to pretend they're the same.

Genteel Death 02.21.2010 05:47 AM

A guy who fought with the Mujahideen against the Russians, who's now 40-something, told me that the only way he could understand someone wanting to blow up a busload of civilians in a country where there was no turf war being fought is that they're living a very abstracted form of existence, which is very modern. They can place themselves somewhere thousands of miles away, and then harden themselves as if they're somewhere they aren't. It's the dream of being a soldier. That romantic notion is very important. But this film is not a guidebook to jihadi motivation. It reflects some of the realities one encounters.
I spoke to a guy who fought with the Taliban against the Northern Alliance -- which is an interesting moral quandary, because the Taliban are obviously "bad" -- but he told me, "When you come across a farm that's been massacred by General Dostum's people, the whole family eviscerated and the grandmother left sobbing in a chair, then you know you're on the right side, because you're against the people who did that." It blows your sense of right and wrong. He left that world long ago, but he talked about that band of brothers feeling, almost like a fratboy with a gun in his hand.
Can you discuss the character of Omar's wife? She seems like the scariest character in the film, in a way. In one scene, she's progressive, fun-loving, etc. and then in another, she's totally behind the idea of her husband blowing himself up and killing tons of people.
The non-comic, factual explanation is that I felt there was a myth about terrorist bombers being medieval-minded, "fundamentalist, primitivist" people. There seems to be a lot of evidence to contradict that, especially in Britain. Some of the ideology behind what has become modern jihadism was socially progressive, certainly in Egypt, for example.
When we see Omar's brother, he's the one who insists that women be in separate rooms -- but he's also the one who's not a terrorist. The character of the wife is deliberately given not much space, but I wanted to show that someone like Omar would need support. There was a video recorded by one of the London bombers back when he thought he was going to Afghanistan, where he was certain to wind up dead, and he'd recorded the video with his nine-month-old daughter in his lap, explaining why he'd gone. He thought he was going to fight the good fight, and wanted to make sure she knew that when she was older and could understand. Obviously, I haven't hung out much with a family that's plotting this kind of thing, but that was an imaginative leap where the wife would be included in the discourse.

Genteel Death 02.21.2010 05:54 AM

What was the response of the Muslims you interviewed to the fact that you were making such a film?
Weirdly, the common response was: "Oh great, about time, bring it on." Which I wasn't expecting. I remember when we were making the film, we had to shoot in a halal kebab shop. The owners asked to be there while we were filming, and I told them they could. But we eventually had to remove them from the room, because they were laughing too hard. Muslims in Britain like the idea that a lighter note might be introduced into the discourse. That's not why I made the film, but I was surprised to find that was their general response. Maybe it's cause I was mostly talking to younger people. The older ones might take a more dim view of some of this stuff.
"Four Lions" does not yet have U.S. distribution.

jon boy 02.21.2010 01:09 PM

from what i have seen its very funny.

Toilet & Bowels 02.21.2010 10:34 PM

ta for the interview

stu666 04.01.2010 12:57 PM

Four Lions Trailer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yGk2T...&feature=email

stu666 04.02.2010 06:04 AM

Chris Morris interview about his new film Four Lions (Part One)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NuNyb...eature=related

Chris Morris interview about his new film Four Lions (Part Two)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Uglk...eature=related

Genteel Death 10.10.2011 12:49 PM

I keep on seeing Chris Morris going to places, when I'm out on a Friday. His taste in clothes is incredible.

the ikara cult 10.10.2011 02:18 PM

does he have a large mark on the side of his face? Or is that just something a bloke in the pub said to me?

Genteel Death 10.10.2011 03:49 PM

It's HUGE! It also looks like the map of London has been painted on his face. I looked at it and found out where Roehampton is located. Can you believe it?

the ikara cult 10.10.2011 04:34 PM

Does that mean theres a big estate full of amateur martial artists and drug addicts just below his cheekbone? Or am i just projecting?


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