CAPTURE TO DELIVERY

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CAPTURE TO DELIVERY

The Pass (2016) directed Ben A. Williams premieres at BFI Flare London

A romantic interaction between two young footballers profoundly affects one of them throughout the rest of his life and career.

The Pass is the story of three very different nights over 10 years in the life of a Premier League Footballer. Jason (Russell Tovey) is at the beginning of his career, and on the night before his first big international match he and long-time friend and team-mate Ade (Arinze Kene) share a hotel room, trying to beat the inevitable pre-match tensions with locker-room banter and teenage high-jinks. Out of nowhere Jason kisses Ade. The emotional repercussions of this pass, and the decisions that follow on and off the pitch, have a major impact on every aspect of the public and private lives of both men across the next decade.

The cast includes Hollyoaks heart-throb Nico Mirallegro and theatre and TV actress Lisa McGrillis.

Tovey, McGrillis and Mirallegro all reprise the roles they originally performed on stage. Michael Billington in The Guardian praised the playโ€™s โ€œsharp wit and visceral powerโ€ and especially Toveyโ€™s โ€œcommanding performanceโ€โ€ฆ โ€œWhat Tovey captures superbly, apart from Jasonโ€™s physical fitness, is his shift from a nervy but determined teenager into aโ€ฆfigure who has paid the price of fame.โ€ Jim White in The Telegraph wrote that โ€œin Russell Toveyโ€™s turn as football superstar Jason, it delivers quite an astonishing central performanceโ€.

Duncan Kenworthy said:

โ€œAs a season ticket holder of a major Premier League Club, I know just how much interest there is in the question of why no currently-playing Premier League player has come out โ€“ or has felt able to come out โ€“ as gay. The Pass is by no means an issue film, but John Donnellyโ€™s wonderful screenplay puts very handsome flesh on the bones of this modern anomaly, imagining the pain, passion and complexity of the lives of elite footballers always inches away from fame or failure, and wondering whether honesty is worth the price.โ€

Clare Stewart, BFI Head of Festivals, said:

โ€œFeaturing compelling performances and a smart, punchy script, The Pass boldly tackles a forbidden topic, outlining one manโ€™s struggle to embrace his sexuality within the hyper masculine and very public world of professional football. We are excited to be launching the 30th edition of BFI Flare โ€“ a Festival that prides itself on a programme which captivates hearts, bodies and minds โ€“ with an impressive and very topical British directorial debut.โ€

For more of the programme see here – https://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/news-bfi/announcements/bfi-flare-london-lgbt-film-festival-30th-anniversary-programme https://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/news-bfi/announcements/bfi-flare-announces-opening-night-film-pass

POST PRODUCTION & FINISHING

TALENT

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