Exclusive: Profile of Rolling Stones bassist leads London-based outfit’s doc slate.
Former Pulse Films head of music Jamie Clark (The Libertines: There Are No Innocent Bystanders) is to produce a documentary about Bill Wyman, the former bassist for The Rolling Stones, under the banner of his new production outfit My Accomplice.
Documentary It’s Always the Quiet Ones, made in collaboration with Wyman, will chart the highs and lows of the musician’s career and include unseen film footage and photographs captured by Wyman during his time with the Stones, who he played with from 1962 to 1993.
Ollie Murray will make his feature debut on the project, which was presented at Sheffield Doc/Fest in June and is currently in pre-production.
Jason Bick (20,000 Days on Earth) will produce with My Accomplice.
On the development slate for the Shoreditch-based company is The Goal Is Rio, about British teenager Lorn Mayers who became the youngest ever player to sign...
Former Pulse Films head of music Jamie Clark (The Libertines: There Are No Innocent Bystanders) is to produce a documentary about Bill Wyman, the former bassist for The Rolling Stones, under the banner of his new production outfit My Accomplice.
Documentary It’s Always the Quiet Ones, made in collaboration with Wyman, will chart the highs and lows of the musician’s career and include unseen film footage and photographs captured by Wyman during his time with the Stones, who he played with from 1962 to 1993.
Ollie Murray will make his feature debut on the project, which was presented at Sheffield Doc/Fest in June and is currently in pre-production.
Jason Bick (20,000 Days on Earth) will produce with My Accomplice.
On the development slate for the Shoreditch-based company is The Goal Is Rio, about British teenager Lorn Mayers who became the youngest ever player to sign...
- 7/31/2015
- by andreas.wiseman@screendaily.com (Andreas Wiseman)
- ScreenDaily
★★★☆☆ The renowned Roger Sargent - music photographer at the NME and cult indie band The Libertines' official photographer and friend - directs The Libertines: There Are No Innocent Bystanders (2011), an engaging yet hum-drum documentation of the group's eagerly anticipated 2010 reunion. If you're expecting the usual tabloid fodder footage of bust-ups, Pete Doherty's drug-taking antics and band members talking to mice, then you might be a little disappointed with what's on offer here. Sargent has clearly been there throughout The Libertines' stellar rise to fame, and thus directs this with an overly sensitive, often undramatic eye.
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- 12/31/2012
- by CineVue UK
- CineVue
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