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1 History  





2 Selected list of productions  





3 References  





4 External links  














Film4 Productions






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Channel Four Films)

Film4 Productions
FormerlyChannel Four Films
FilmFour
FilmFour International
Company typeFilm production company
Founded1982
HeadquartersLondon, England, United Kingdom

Number of locations

2

Key people

Tessa Ross
ProductsMotion Pictures
ParentChannel Four Television Corporation
Websitewww.film4productions.com

Film4 Productions is a British film production company owned by Channel Four Television Corporation. The company has been responsible for backing many films made in the United Kingdom. The company's first production was Walter, directed by Stephen Frears, which was released in 1982. It is especially known for its gritty, kitchen sink-style films and period dramas.

History

[edit]

In 1981, producer David Rose left the BBC for Channel 4 where he was appointed the Commissioning Editor for Fiction by Jeremy Isaacs, the channel's founding Chief Executive but became mostly identified with the Film on Four strand. With an initial overall budget of £6 million a year, Channel Four Films was to invest in twenty films annually for Film on Four.[1] The first film backed was Neil Jordan's debut film Angel (1982).[2] The first film shown as part of Film on Four was Stephen Frears's Walter which was screened on 2 November 1982, the launch date of Channel 4. P'tang, Yang, Kipperbang screened the following day was also an early highlight.[3] Originally, the company's films were intended for television screenings alone; the "holdback" system prevented investment in theatrical films by television companies because of the length of time (then three years) before broadcasters could screen them. An agreement soon concluded with the Cinema Exhibitors Association allowed a brief period of cinema exhibition if the budget of the films was below £1.25 million.[3] Channel Four Films struck several deals with other film production companies including the BFI Production Board, Goldcrest Films and Merchant Ivory.[3] By 1984, Channel Four Films were investing in a third of the feature films made in the UK.[4]

Channel Four's Business Development Department was formed in 1983 for TV and film sales[5] and they also invested in foreign films including Wim Wenders' Paris, Texas (1984) and Jan Svankmajer's Alice (1988).[3] In 1985 FilmFour International was created as a separate international film sales arm and to invest in foreign film, including Andrei Tarkovsky's The Sacrifice (1986).[5][2][3]

Channel Four Film's first big hit was Frears' third feature film for the cinema, My Beautiful Laundrette, in 1985.[6] Originally shot in 16mm for Channel 4 it was met with such critical acclaim at the Edinburgh Film Festival that it was acquired by Orion Classics and distributed to cinemas and became an international success.[7][8][2]

In 1987, FilmFour International agreed a licensing deal with Orion Classics to handle US distribution of two more FilmFour features, Rita, Sue and Bob Too and A Month in the Country.[9] By 1987, Channel 4 had an interest in half the films being made in the United Kingdom.[10]

Rose and Channel Four Films are credited by many as being a significant figure in the regeneration of British cinema and particularly remembered for films such as Wish You Were Here, Dance With a Stranger, Mona Lisa, and Letter to Brezhnev. Channel Four Films also invested in early Working Title Films as well as most of the films of Frears, Ken Loach and Mike Leigh.[2] Leigh told writer Hannah Rothschild around 2008 that Film on Four had saved the British film industry: "This is a non-negotiable, historical fact of life and anybody who suggests that this isn't the case is simply either suffering from some kind of ignorance or has got some terrible chip."[1]

Rose remained in his post as Commissioning Editor until March 1990.[6] During his tenure at Channel 4, Rose approved the making of 136 films, half of which received cinema screenings.[11] Of the films Rose backed, 20 were from overseas sources, including work by directors Theo Angelopoulos, Andrei Tarkovsky and Wim Wenders.[12] The company also helped British minority filmmakers including Po-Chih Leong (Ping Pong (1986)); Horace Ové (Playing Away (1986)) and Hanif Kureishi (My Beautiful Laundrette; Sammy and Rosie Get Laid (1987)). This continued after Rose's departure with films directed by Gurinder Chadha (Bhaji on the Beach (1993)) and Steve McQueen (Hunger (2008)).[13]

David Aukin joined as head of drama in October 1990 and took over responsibility for Film on Four.[6] He changed his title to head of film in 1997 which he remained until 1998.[2]

The company had another big international success with Jordan's The Crying Game in 1992.[2] In addition it was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture as was Howards End the same year. Damage also received an Academy Award nomination that year.[6] Later in 1993, Leigh's Naked and Loach's Raining Stones were entered into competition at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival.[6]

The following year, Mike Newell's Four Weddings and a Funeral became the highest-grossing UK film of all time and Danny Boyle's Trainspotting (1996) was also very successful.[2]

In the 1990s, Channel Four partnered with The Samuel Goldwyn Company to create a distribution company to release Channel Four films and Goldwyn films in the UK but Goldwyn pulled out late on and in August 1995, Film Four Distributors was formed.[14] Its first release was Blue Juice (1995) and its first major successes were Secrets & Lies and Brassed Off in 1996.[15][16][2]

In 1998, the company was re-branded as FilmFour with an annual budget of £32 million for 8 to 10 films.[6] East Is East (1999) becomes their biggest self-funded film.[6] In 2000, the company signed a three-year deal with Warner Bros. to make seven films with budgets of more than £13 million but their first, Charlotte Gray (2001) was not the success they hoped for.[6]

The company cut its budget and staff significantly in 2002, due to mounting losses, and was reintegrated into the drama department of Channel 4. The name "Film4 Productions" was introduced in 2006 to tie in with the relaunch of the FilmFour broadcast channel as Film4.[citation needed]

Tessa Ross was head of both Film4 and Channel 4 drama from 2002 to 2014.[17][18]

Selected list of productions

[edit]

This is a list of the most notable productions by Film4.

  • 127 Hours (co-production with Pathé, Fox Searchlight Pictures, Everest Entertainment, Cloud Eight Films, Darlow Smithson Productions and Warner Bros. Pictures)
  • 20,000 Days on Earth (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • 24 Hour Party People (co-production with United Artists, UK Film Council, Revolution Films and Baby Cow Productions)
  • 45 Years (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • '71 (co-production with British Film Institute, Screen Yorkshire, Creative Scotland and Warp Films)
  • A Complete History of My Sexual Failures (co-production with Warp Films, Screen Yorkshire, EM Media, Madman Entertainment and UK Film Council)
  • A Field in England
  • A Life Less Ordinary (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and 20th Century Fox)
  • A Most Wanted Man (co-production with FilmNation Entertainment)
  • A Month in the Country (co-production with Euston Films)
  • A Room with a View (co-production with Merchant Ivory Productions and Goldcrest Films)
  • A Zed and Two Noughts (co-production with British Film Institute and Artificial Eye)
  • Amy (co-production with Universal Music, Playmaker Films & Krishwerkz Entertainment)
  • American Animals
  • American Buffalo (co-production with Capitol Films)
  • American Honey (co-production with Parts & Labor, Pulse Films, ManDown Pictures, British Film Institute, and Maven Pictures)
  • An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • And When Did You Last See Your Father? (co-production with Sony Pictures Classics, UK Film Council, EM Media, Tiger Aspect, Bórd Scannán na hÉireann/Irish Film Board and European Development Fund)
  • Angel
  • Angels & Insects (co-production with The Samuel Goldwyn Company)
  • Another Year (co-production with Thin Man Films)
  • Attack the Block (co-production with Big Talk Productions, StudioCanal and UK Film Council)
  • Backbeat (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment)
  • Bad Behaviour
  • Bandit Queen (co-production with Kaleidoscope Entertainment)
  • Beast (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • Beautiful Thing
  • Been So Long (co-production with Netflix and British Film Institute)
  • Bent (co-production with Arts Council of England)
  • Berberian Sound Studio (co-production with Warp X Productions, Screen Yorkshire and UK Film Council)
  • Bhaji on the Beach
  • Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk (co-production with TriStar Pictures)
  • Birthday Girl (co-production with Miramax Films, Mirage Enterprises and HAL Films)
  • Black Sea (co-production with Focus Features)
  • Blue (co-production with BBC Radio 3 and Arts Council of Great Britain)
  • Blue Juice
  • Blonde Fist
  • Brassed Off (co-production with Miramax Films and Prominent Features)
  • Bread and Roses
  • Brian and Charles (co-production with British Film Institute and Mr Box Productions)
  • Brothers of the Head (co-production with Screen East and EM Media)
  • Buena Vista Social Club (co-production with Road Movies Filmproduktion and Arte)
  • Buffalo Soldiers (co-production with Good Machine and Miramax Films)
  • Bunny and the Bull (co-production with Warp X Productions, Wild Bunch, Optimum Releasing, Screen Yorkshire and UK Film Council)
  • Career Girls
  • Carla's Song (co-production with Glasgow Film Office and Televisión Española)
  • Carol (co-production with Number 9 Films and Killer Films)
  • Catch Me Daddy (co-production with British Film Institute and Screen Yorkshire)
  • Charlotte Gray (co-production with Ecosse Films and Warner Bros.)
  • Christmas Carol: The Movie (co-production with UK Film Council)
  • Cold War (co-production with British Film Institute and MK2)
  • Comrades (co-production with now-defunct National Film Finance Corporation)
  • Croupier (co-production with Arte and Westdeutscher Rundfunk)
  • Cuban Fury (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • Damage (co-production with Le Studio Canal+ and Canal+)
  • Dance with a Stranger
  • Dancer in the Dark (co-production with Canal+, France 3 Cinéma, Zentropa and Fine Line Features)
  • Dancing at Lughnasa (co-production with Sony Pictures Classics, Bórd Scannán na hÉireann/Irish Film Board, Raidió Teilifís Éireann and Capitol Films)
  • Dead Man's Shoes
  • Death and the Maiden (co-production with Capitol Films, Canal+, TF1 and Fine Line Features)
  • Death to Smoochy (co-production with Senator Film and Warner Bros.)
  • Deep Water
  • Dirt Music (co-production with ScreenWest)
  • Disobedience (co-production with FilmNation Entertainment and Element Pictures)
  • Dog Eat Dog (co-production with Tiger Aspect Productions)
  • Dogma (produced by View Askew)
  • Donkey Punch (co-production with EM Media, Madman Entertainment, Screen Yorkshire, UK Film Council and Warp X Productions)
  • Dream Horse (co-production with Cornerstone Films, Ingenious Media, Raw, Topic Studios, FFilm Cymru Wales, Bleecker Street, Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions and Warner Bros. Pictures)
  • Drowning by Numbers
  • Dust Devil(co-production with Miramax Films)
  • East Is East
  • Eat the Rich (co-production with Michael White)
  • Elizabeth (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Meridian and Working Title Films)
  • Enduring Love (co-production with Pathé, UK Film Council and Ingenious Film Partners)
  • Ex Machina (co-production with Universal Pictures and DNA Films)
  • Experience Preferred... But Not Essential
  • Everybody's Talking About Jamie (co-production with New Regency Pictures, 20th Century Fox and Warp Films)
  • Fever Pitch
  • Fighting with My Family (co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, WWE Studios and Seven Bucks Productions)
  • For Those in Peril (co-production with Warp X Productions)
  • Four Lions (co-production with Warp Films, Wild Bunch and Optimum Releasing)
  • Four Weddings and a Funeral (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and Working Title Films)
  • Frank
  • Franklyn (co-production with Recorded Picture Company, HanWay Films and UK Film Council)
  • Free Fire (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • Funny Games (co-production with Warner Independent Pictures and Tartan Films)
  • Gabriel and Me (co-production with Pathé, Isle of Man Film and UK Film Council)
  • Gangster No. 1 (co-production with Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg, Road Movies Filmproduktion and BSkyB)
  • Giro City
  • God on the Rocks
  • Gregory's Two Girls
  • Greed (co-production with Columbia Pictures and Revolution Films)
  • Hallam Foe (co-production with Ingenious Film Partners, Glasgow Film Office, Scottish Screen and Sigma Films)
  • Happy-Go-Lucky (co-production with Ingenious Film Partners and Summit Entertainment)
  • Hear My Song
  • Hero
  • Hidden City
  • High Hopes
  • High-Rise (co-production with Recorded Picture Company, HanWay Films and the British Film Institute)
  • Hilary and Jackie
  • Holy Smoke! (co-production with Miramax Films)
  • How I Live Now (co-production with British Film Institute, Magnolia Pictures and Passion Pictures)
  • How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (co-production with UK Film Council)
  • How to Talk to Girls at Parties (co-production with HanWay Films, See-Saw Films and Little Punk)
  • How to Build a Girl (co-production with Tango Entertainment, British Film Institute, Monumental Pictures, Protagonist Pictures)
  • Howards End
  • Hunger
  • Hush (co-production with Warp X, Pathé, Screen Yorkshire, UK Film Council and Optimum Releasing)
  • Hyde Park on Hudson (co-production with Daybreak Pictures and Focus Features)
  • In Bruges (co-production with Focus Features)
  • In the Shadow of the Moon (co-production with Discovery Films and Passion Pictures)
  • Institute Benjamenta (co-production with Pandora Film)
  • Invincible (co-production with Fine Line Features)
  • Jimmy's Hall
  • Joe Strummer: The Future Is Unwritten
  • Journeyman
  • K-PAX (co-production with Universal Pictures and Intermedia Films)
  • Kill List (co-production with UK Film Council, Warp X, Screen Yorkshire and Rook Films)
  • Kinds of Kindness (co-production with Searchlight Pictures, Element Pictures and TSG Entertainment)
  • Ladybird, Ladybird
  • Last Night in Soho (co-production with Focus Features and Working Title Films)
  • Late Night Shopping (co-production with Scottish Screen and Glasgow Film Office)
  • Le Week-End
  • Lean on Pete (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • Life (co-production with See-Saw Films, Telefilm Canada and Screen Australia)
  • Life Is Sweet
  • London Kills Me (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and Working Title Films)
  • Looking for Eric (co-production with Icon Entertainment International and Wild Bunch)
  • Lucky Break (co-production with Paramount Pictures and Miramax Films)
  • Macbeth (co-production with StudioCanal, DMC Film, Anton Capital Entertainment, Creative Scotland and See-Saw Films)
  • Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence
  • Mary Magdalene (co-production with Universal Pictures, Porchlight Films, Affirm Films, Columbia Pictures and See-Saw Films[19])
  • Me and You and Everyone We Know
  • Mister Lonely (co-production with Recorded Picture Company)
  • Moonlighting
  • Mr. Turner (co-production with British Film Institute, Focus Features International and Thin Man Films)
  • My Beautiful Laundrette (co-production with SAF Productions and Working Title Films)
  • My Name Is Joe
  • Neds (co-production with Scottish Screen, UK Film Council and Wild Bunch)
  • Never Let Me Go (co-production with DNA Films and Fox Searchlight Pictures)
  • Night on Earth (co-production with JVC Entertainment, Victor Music Industries, Le Studio Canal + and Pandora Film)
  • Nothing Personal (co-production with Bórd Scannán na hÉireann/Irish Film Board)
  • Nowhere Boy (co-production with UK Film Council, Ecosse Films and The Weinstein Company)
  • On the Road (co-production with American Zoetrope, MK2, France Télévisions, Canal+, Ciné+, France 2 Cinéma and Vanguard Films)
  • Once Upon a Time in the Midlands (co-production with UK Film Council)
  • One Day (co-production with Focus Features, Random House Films and Color Force)
  • Orphans (co-production with Scottish Arts Council and Glasgow Film Office)
  • P'tang, Yang, Kipperbang
  • Paris, Texas (co-production with Westdeutscher Rundfunk)
  • Peter's Friends (co-production with The Samuel Goldwyn Company)
  • Peterloo (co-production with British Film Institute, Amazon Studios and Thin Man Films)
  • Poor Things (co-production with Searchlight Pictures, Element Pictures and TSG Entertainment)
  • Prospero's Books (co-production with Canal+, Eurimages, VPRO, NHK, Cineplex Odeon Films and Palace Pictures)
  • Purely Belter
  • Queen of Hearts (co-production with Nelson Entertainment, TVS Television and Cinecom)
  • Raining Stones
  • Red Monarch (co-production with Goldcrest Films and Enigma Productions)
  • Remembrance
  • Riff-Raff
  • Rita, Sue and Bob Too
  • Rocks
  • Room (co-production with Element Pictures and No Trace Camping)
  • Saint Maud (co-production with British Film Institute, Escape Plan Productions and StudioCanal)
  • Sammy and Rosie Get Laid (co-production with Working Title Films)
  • Secrets & Lies (co-production with Ciby 2000)
  • Series 7: The Contenders (co-production with USA Films)
  • Seven Psychopaths (co-production with British Film Institute, HanWay Films and CBS Films)
  • Sexy Beast (Co-production with Kanzaman, Fox Searchlight Pictures and Recorded Picture Company)
  • Shallow Grave
  • Shame (co-production with Fox Searchlight Pictures, UK Film Council, See-Saw Films, HanWay Films and Momentum Pictures/Alliance Films)
  • Shaun of the Dead (co-production with Big Talk Productions, Working Title Films, StudioCanal, Universal Pictures and Rogue Pictures)
  • She'll Be Wearing Pink Pyjamas
  • Shopping (co-production with Kuzui Enterprises and PolyGram Filmed Entertainment)
  • Sightseers (co-production with Big Talk Pictures)
  • Sister My Sister
  • Slow West (co-production with the New Zealand Film Commission and See-Saw Films)
  • Slumdog Millionaire (co-production with Fox Searchlight Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Pathé and Celador Films)
  • Starred Up (co-production with Creative Scotland, Northern Ireland Screen and Sigma Films)
  • Stormy Monday (co-production with Atlantic Entertainment Group)
  • Straightheads (co-production with Ingenious Film Partners and UK Film Council)
  • Submarine (co-production with Red Hour Films and Warp Films)
  • Suffragette (co-production with 20th Century Fox, Pathé, BFI, Ingenious Media, Canal+, Cine+ and Ruby Films)
  • Sunshine (co-production with Alliance Atlantis, Eurimages, Telefilm Canada, The Movie Network, Kinowelt, TV2, ORF and Paramount Classics)
  • The Acid House
  • The Actors (co-production with Miramax Films and Bórd Scannán na hÉireann/Irish Film Board)
  • The Baby of Mâcon (co-production with UGC and Canal+)
  • The Belly of an Architect (co-production with Hemdale Film Corporation)
  • The Crying Game (co-production with British Screen, Eurotrustees, Nippon Film Development and Finance and Palace Pictures)
  • The Debt Collector
  • The Deep Blue Sea (co-production with UK Film Council and Artificial Eye)
  • The Double (co-production with Alcove Entertainment and British Film Institute)
  • The Draughtsman's Contract (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • The Eagle (co-production with Focus Features)
  • The Emperor's New Clothes
  • The Favourite (co-production with Fox Searchlight Pictures and Element Pictures)
  • The Festival (co-production with Entertainment Film Distributors)
  • The Filth and the Fury (co-production with Jersey Films)
  • The Future (co-production with Medienboard Berlin-Brandenburg)
  • The Great Bear
  • The House of Mirth (co-production with Granada Productions, Kinowelt, Arts Council of England, Showtime Networks and The Scottish Arts Council)
  • The Inbetweeners Movie (co-production with Bwark Productions, Young Films and Entertainment Film Distributors)
  • The Inbetweeners 2 (co-production with Bwark Productions)
  • The Iron Lady (co-production with Pathé, UK Film Council and The Weinstein Company)
  • The King
  • The Killing of a Sacred Deer (co-production with Element Pictures, Newsparta Films & A24)
  • The Land Girls (co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Gramercy Pictures, Intermedia Films and Canal+)
  • The Last King of Scotland (co-production with DNA Films and Fox Searchlight Pictures)
  • The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse (co-production with Universal Pictures and Tiger Aspect)
  • The Little Stranger (co-production with Pathé, Canal+ and Element Pictures)
  • The Lobster (co-production with Irish Film Board, Eurimages, Netherlands Film Fund, British Film Institute, Canal+, Ciné+, CNC, Institut Français, Greek Film Centre, Element Pictures, Scarlet Films, Faliro House, Haut et Court and Lemming Films)
  • The Look of Love (co-production with StudioCanal UK, Revolution Films and Baby Cow Productions)
  • The Lovely Bones (co-production with DreamWorks Pictures and Paramount Pictures)
  • The Low Down (co-production with British Screen, Oil Factory and Sleeper Films)
  • The Madness of King George (co-production with The Samuel Goldwyn Company)
  • The Miracle
  • The Motorcycle Diaries
  • The Navigators (co-production with Road Movies Filmproduktion, Westdeutscher Rundfunk and Arte)
  • The Neon Bible (co-production with Artificial Eye)
  • The Personal History of David Copperfield (co-production with FilmNation Entertainment)
  • The Pillow Book (co-production with Canal+)
  • A Pin for the Butterfly
  • The Ploughman's Lunch (co-production with Goldcrest Films and Michael White)
  • The Pope Must Die (co production with Miramax Films, Palace Pictures and Michael White)
  • The Red Violin (co-production with New Line Cinema, Lionsgate, Telefilm Canada and CITY-TV)
  • The Riot Club (co-production with Universal Pictures, British Film Institute, HanWay Films and Pinewood Pictures)
  • The Selfish Giant (co-production with British Film Institute)
  • The Scouting Book for Boys (co-production with Celador Films, Screen East and Pathé)
  • The Spirit of '45
  • The Stone Roses: Made of Stone (co-production with Warp Films)
  • The Straight Story (co-production with StudioCanal and Walt Disney Pictures)
  • The Supergrass (co-production with The Comic Strip and Michael White)
  • The Woman in the Fifth (co-production with UK Film Council, Canal+, Orange Cinéma Séries and Artificial Eye)
  • The Woodlanders (co-production with Pathé Productions and Arts Council of England)
  • This Is England (co-production with UK Film Council, Optimum Releasing, Screen Yorkshire and Warp Films)
  • Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (co-production with Fox Searchlight Pictures and Blueprint Pictures)
  • To Kill a King (co-production with Natural Nylon and HanWay Films)
  • Touching the Void (co-production with Channel 4, UK Film Council, Darlow Smithson Productions and PBS)
  • Trainspotting
  • T2 Trainspotting (co-production with TriStar Pictures, Cloud Eight Films and DNA Films)
  • Trance (co-production with Pathé, Fox Searchlight Pictures and Cloud Eight Films and Indian Paintbrush)
  • Trespass Against Us (co-production with Potboiler Productions)
  • Trojan Eddie (co-production with Bórd Scannán na hÉireann/Irish Film Board)
  • True Blue
  • True History of the Kelly Gang (co-production with Film Victoria and Screen Australia)
  • Tyrannosaur (co-production with Warp X, Inflammable Films, UK Film Council, Screen Yorkshire, EM Media, and Optimum Releasing (as StudioCanal UK))
  • Under the Skin (co-production with British Film Institute, FilmNation Entertainment, Scottish Screen, Nick Wechsler Productions and A24 Films)
  • Una (co-production with Bron Studios, Jean Doumanian Productions, and WestEnd Films)
  • Velvet Goldmine (co-production with Newmarket Capital Group, Miramax Films, Killer Films and Zenith Entertainment)
  • Venus (co-production with UK Film Council and Miramax Films)
  • Very Annie Mary (co-production with Canal+)
  • Walking and Talking (co-production with Miramax Films, Zenith Productions, Pandora Film, Mikado Films (France), Electric, TEAM Communications Group, PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and Good Machine)
  • Walter
  • Waterland
  • Welcome to Sarajevo (co-production with Miramax Films)
  • When the Wind Blows (co-production with Kings Road Entertainment)
  • Widows (co-production with 20th Century Fox, Regency Enterprises and See-Saw Films)
  • Wild West
  • Wish You Were Here
  • With or Without You (co-production with Miramax Films and Revolution Films)
  • Wittgenstein (co-production with the British Film Institute)
  • Wuthering Heights (co-production with HanWay Films, Ecosse Films, UK Film Council, Goldcrest Films and Screen Yorkshire)
  • You Were Never Really Here (co-production with Why Not Productions, British Film Institute and Page 114)
  • Zastrozzi, A Romance
  • References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b Rothschild, Hannah (2008). Labour of Love, C4 at 25. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h Tutt, Louise (26 September 1997). "Hope & Glory". Screen International. pp. 30–36.
  • ^ a b c d e Brooke, Michael. "Channel 4 and Film". BFI screenonline.
  • ^ Susan Emanuel "Channel Four - British Programming Service" Archived 4 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Museum of Broadcast Communications website; Susan Emmanuel "Channel Four — British Programming Service", in Horace Newcomb (ed) Encyclopedia of Television: Volume 1, A-C, New York: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2004, p487
  • ^ a b Tutt, Louise (26 September 1997). "The Four Element". Screen International. p. 30.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h Deans, Jason (8 July 2002). "Timeline: FilmFour - where did it all go wrong?". The Guardian.
  • ^ "Laundry Days". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  • ^ "BFI Screenonline: My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)". www.screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  • ^ "Film Four Pic Pair To Orion Classics". Variety. 18 February 1987. pp. 4, 46.
  • ^ David Rose quoted by Dorothy Hobson in Channel 4: The Early Years and the Jeremy Isaacs Legacy, London: I.B Tauris, 2008, p.64
  • ^ Isaacs, Jeremy (8 November 2004). "Happy Birthday to the leader with the golden touch". The Independent.
  • ^ Purser, Philip; Isaacs, Jeremy (15 February 2017). "David Rose obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  • ^ White, George (May 2022). "Ping Pong". Sight and Sound. p. 99.
  • ^ Dawtrey, Adam (10 July 1995). "Ch. 4 heads into distrib'n alone". Variety. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  • ^ Duncan, Celia (8 November 1996). "Blowing Your Own Trumpet". Screen International. p. 22.
  • ^ Tutt, Louise (26 September 1997). "The Four Man". Screen International. p. 31.
  • ^ Gibson, Owen (6 February 2006). "Interview: Tessa Ross". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  • ^ Plunkett, John (26 March 2014). "Channel 4 boss Tessa Ross appointed chief executive of the National Theatre". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
  • ^ Kay, Jeremey (21 August 2017). "Rooney Mara drama 'Mary Magdalene' held back for next year's awards season". Screen International. Retrieved 21 August 2017.

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