these are helpful thanks. alan clarke and mike leigh I'd like to watch more ofNaked is a very good shout.
There is also, more recently, "London to Brighton" which is a bit grubby and falls away as a film once they get to Brighton, but some strong bits early on.
You've also got classics like "Nil by mouth", again quite heavy but if you liked Naked... One of my fave English films.
The early hitchcock with ivor novello, blackmail (?) is also very good and very London.
As is his later one, frenzy, but again, it's quite a tough watch. Like hitch trying to be a bit Don siegel or Sam peckinpah and it's too much.
Babylon also a good shout? Different vibe entirely but all set in Brixton.
Performance is a classic London film, I always find you need to be in the right mood for it, I enjoyed it a lot last time I watched it, quite recently. Cos I'd just been reading all about the writer.
I'm sure there's loads more... That godard one with the stones?
It's not all set in London, but the opening of 28 Days Later made an impression.
And there's a fun Rutger Hauer thing called Split Second where he plays a cop hunting a serial killer in a flooded out future London.
No there's a godard film with the rolling stones, possibly also the black panthers.
After establishing a fine reputation in British television drama, Stephen Poliakoff directed his first feature film in 1987. A mystery wrapped in conspiracy and secrets, Hidden City tells the story of James Richards (Charles Dance), a writer sucked into a search for a lost piece of film by Sharon Newton (Cassie Stuart), a video librarian. What they stumble upon are cover-ups, tense searches, and possible danger.
With the help of Witold Stoks’ excellent cinematography, Poliakoff has crafted a rich look into London’s dark history, with disused tram-tunnels and long-forgotten subterranean chambers serving as the backdrop to explore the depths of the British pre-occupation with secrecy. Featuring a sensational cast of stellar British talent including Charles Dance, Richard E. Grant and Bill Paterson, Stephen Poliakoff's rarely seen directorial debut is a stylish thriller ripe for rediscovery.
Yeah sounds like a lot of godard. Best in the cinema if you can.i remember at least liking the stones bits, as i do like their music a lot, but i was zoning out when it went to the student narrative, felt a bit mastubatory of godard to put that in a film masked as a "music" or "rolling stones" film.
maybe not the correct thread to ask but are there any particular "London" films you all enjoy? films set in london, whether london the location is a character or not, the way new york and LA often are in American films. I'm sure I've seen more, but Naked by Mike Leigh is the only one springing to mind.