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Cold Blood
Despised serial killer Brian Wicklow is the only one who can locate the body of a young woman. But he’s spent most of his incarceration playing mind-games with the authorities and talking in riddles. But there may finally be a man who can get to him: a former convict with a tormented past of his own.
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Another Mother’s Son (2017)
Directed by Christopher Menaul (‘Summer in February’, ‘Fatherland) and written by Jenny Lecoat, Another Mother’s Son tells the true story of Louisa Gould, a widow living in Nazi occupied Jersey who takes in a Russian prisoner of war, Feodor Burrij. Jenny Seagrove, Julian Kostov, John Hannah, Ronan Keating and Amanda Abbington star. The producer is Bill Kenwright.
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Genesis (2017)
‘Genesis’ is the third feature from British writing and directing duo Bart Ruspoli & Freddie Hutton-Mills. The first in a sci-fi trilogy, ‘Genesis’ explores the nature of free will and what…
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Afterlife
Afterlife is a British television drama series, produced by independent production company Clerkenwell Films for the ITV network. The series follows the activities of a psychic medium who appears to have the ability to communicate with the spirits of the dead.
First broadcast in 2005, the show ran for two series, and after the end of the second series ITV decided not to renew it.
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McCallum
McCallum is a British television series that was produced by STV Productions.
Dr Iain McCallum was the original lead character, played by John Hannah. McCallum was a forensic pathologist who traveled by Triumph Motorcycle, and solved murders. The character had romantic involvements with two of the other principal characters, Joanna, and later Angela. The last episode did not include McCallum and Angela as the story stated that they had taken jobs in America. They were replaced by Dr. Dan Gallagher and Dr. Charley Fielding.
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The Marker (2017)
Noir thriller about a criminal seeking redemption by tracking down the daughter of the woman he killed. Along the way he is haunted by his guilt in the guise of the woman’s ghost.
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Marley’s Ghosts
Marley has a rare gift that comes with mixed blessings – she can talk to the dead, who sadly now include both her husband Adam, her lover Michael and her vicar… Awkward.
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Ghost Son (2007)
“Ghost Son” takes place in South Africa. A married couple Stacey and Mark live on the farm with their black teenage maid. Mark and Stacey love each other deeply. Unfortunately Mark dies in a tragic truck accident.Stacey returns to the farm and decides to remain there since she feels close to Mark.She is also carrying Mark’s baby. After delivering the baby Stacey quickly becomes sure that her infant son is possessed by Mark’s spirit. The evil force tries to kill Stacey to bring her to Mark.
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Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (2003)
Dr Jekyll & Mr Hyde is Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic tale of horror, the duality of mankind and the darker side of late Victorian society. Dr Henry Jekyll (John Hannah), a great scientist, handsome, and renowned throughout the scientific community, is developing a formula that will revolutionise human nature by isolating criminal elements. He experiments on himself and intoxicated by the drug he undergoes a monstrous transformation. He is released from conventions of the social order and his own moral code into euphoric, remorseless wickedness – the villainous Mr Hyde. What follows is the gripping and terrifying stuggle of two opposing personalities battling for the soul of one man…
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Pandaemonium (2001)
Set in England during the early 19th century, Pandaemonium evokes late-1960s America in its depiction of the relationship between Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Linus Roach) and William Wordsworth (John Hannah). Instead of going to Vietnam, Wordsworth goes off to fight against the French while Coleridge stays at home and promotes utopianism. After the war, the poets live and work together with Coleridge’s wife, Sara (Samantha Morton), and Wordsworth’s sister, Dorothy (Emily Woof). At first this communal arrangement works to the advantage of Coleridge–who does some of his best writing while Wordsworth stagnates–until Coleridge becomes addicted to opium. Wordsworth, meanwhile, doesn’t find his voice until he abandons his friend. In 20th-century vernacular, Wordsworth is the yuppie, Coleridge the hippie.
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