Product Tag - Nicola Shindler

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    Hit & Miss

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    Hit & Miss

    An assassin with a secret, Mia’s life is changed forever by a letter from her ex.

    $8.00
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    The Second Coming

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    The Second Coming

    The Second Coming is a two-part British television drama first screened on ITV in the United Kingdom in February 2003. It concerns the realisation of Steve Baxter that he is in fact the Son of God, and has just a few days to find the human race’s Third Testament and thus avert the Apocalypse.

    It was written by Russell T Davies, and produced by the independent Red Production Company. The programme was originally commissioned as four one-hour episodes by Channel 4 in 1999; however, when new executives took over running the drama department at that channel, they decided not to pursue the project. Davies and Red’s founder Nicola Shindler took the project to the BBC, who quickly turned it down; it found a home on ITV, a channel that had gained a reputation for producing mainstream, unchallenging, “middle-of-the-road” drama in recent years.

    Screened over two successive evenings in prime time on Sunday and Monday, 9–10 February 2003, The Second Coming gained viewing figures of over six million. Davies, who is an atheist, has said his intention was to provoke debate and get people thinking about religion.

    $4.00
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    Exile

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    Exile

    Exile is a British psychological thriller television series dealing with the topic of Alzheimer’s disease against a background of corruption. It stars John Simm and Jim Broadbent and was broadcast on BBC One. The series received varyingly positive reviews.

    John Simm received a BAFTA nomination for his role as Tom Ronstadt, as did the director John Alexander.

    $8.00
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    Queer as Folk

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    Queer as Folk

    Queer as Folk is a 1999 British television series that chronicles the lives of three gay men living in Manchester’s gay village around Canal Street. Both Queer as Folk and Queer as Folk 2 were written by Russell T Davies. The first series was re-shown on More 4 between 14 and 18 October 2007, as part of Channel 4’s 25th-birthday celebrations.

    Queer as Folk was produced by the Red Production Company for Channel 4. The title of the programme comes from a dialect expression from some parts of Northern England, “there’s nowt so queer as folk”, meaning “there’s nothing as strange as people”; which is a word play the modern day English synonym of “queer”, meaning homosexual. Davies had originally titled the series this, although at the suggestion of Channel 4 executives for a period during its development and pre-production it was known as Queer as Fuck, before it reverted to the former name.

    $4.00$16.00
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