Showing posts with label Bernard Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernard Hill. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Born on this day – Bernard Hill:


Bernard Hill


Actor

December 17, 1944 – 5 May 5, 2024

Credits:

10th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (2004); 2003 MTV Movie Awards (2003); 2nd House (1974); 30 Greatest Political Comedies (2006); A Dirty Knight's Work (1976); A Midsummer Night's Dream (1999); A Question of Faith (2000); A Very Social Secretary (2005); About Face (1991); Alan Davies' Teenage Revolution (2010); Analogue Love (2011); Ancient Egyptians (2004); Auntie's Bloomers (1991–2001); BBC2 Play of the Week (1977–1978); Beatles Biggest Secrets (2004); Bellman and True (1987); Bernard Hill Remembers... Boys from the Blackstuff (2022); Between the Lines (1993); Big-atures / The Passing of an Age / Home of the Horse Lords (2004); Billy Connolly: An Audience with Billy Connolly (1985); Bombay Railway (2007); Boys from the Blackstuff (1982); Breakfast Time (1986); Brief History of Disbelief (2004); Cameras in Middle-Earth (2004); Canoe Man (2010); Childhood (1974); Christmas University Challenge (2014); CR: Titanic (2011); Crime Story (1992); Crown Court (1976); Cruel Sea: The Penlee Disaster (2006); Dispatches (2009); Double Helix: The DNA Years (2004); Double X: The Name of the Game (1992); Drowning by Numbers (1988); Drug-Taking and the Arts (1993); Du kommst nicht vorbei - Fans im Bann des Ringes (2005); Eisenstein (2000); El corazón de la tierra (2007); Equinox (1997); Europe, a Modern Profile (1992–1993); Everyman (1985 / 1986); Exodus (2007); Fable III (2010); Fairy Tales (2008); Falcón (2012); First Knight (1995); Five Days (2010); Folk America (2009); Forever Young (2023); Fox (1980); Franklyn (2008); From There to Here (2014); Gandhi (1982); Going Off Big Time (2000); Golden Moustache (2016); Golden Years (2016); Gothika (2003); Great Expectations (1999); Have I Got News for You (2005); HBO First Look (1997); Heatwave (2005); Hope and Wire (2014); Horizon (2001–2016); How Britain Worked (2012); I, Claudius (1976); Indian Hill Railways (2010); India's Frontier Railways (2015); Interlude City (2016); It Could Happen to You (1976); Jackanory (1985); John Lennon: A Journey in the Life (1985); Joy Division (2006); Ken Dodd in the Dock (2002); Lego the Lord of the Rings (2012); Lipstick on Your Collar (1993); Love Is Not Enough: The Journey to Adoption (2000–2001); Madagascar Skin (1995); Mania (2007); Match of the Eighties (1997); Midsummer Dream (2005); Milwr Bychan (1987); Mountain Men (1986); Mountains of the Moon (1990); Mr. Toad's Wild Ride (1996); No Go: The Free Derry Story (2006); No Surrender (1985); North v South (2015); Olly's Prison (1993); On the Set of 'Gothika' (2004); On the Set: The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002); Once Upon a Time in the North (1994); OutPost 11 (2013); ParaNorman (2012); Pickersgill People (1978); Play for Today (1973–1981); Premiere (1977); Raphael: A Mortal God (2004); Reflections on Titanic (2012); Restless Natives (1985); Reunited Apart (2020); Revealed (2006); Richard III (1983); Ring*Con 2004 (2004); Ringens disipler (2004); Rooms (1977); Runners (1983); Samson and Delilah (1985); Save Angel Hope (2007); Saxon Gold: Finding the Hoard (2010); Say No to Strangers (1981); Scenes by the Sea: Takeshi Kitano (2000); Screen Two (1985–1994); Screenplay (1990); Second City Firsts (1977); Secret Lives (1997); Secrets of the Deep (2006); See You in the Future... (2004); Segunda oportunidad (2018); Shakespeare: The Animated Tales (1992); Shepherd on the Rock (2014); Shirley Valentine (1989); Shrinks (1991); Special Collector's Edition (2011); Squaring the Circle (1984); Stages (1994); Still Life (1984); Sunshine (2008); Surviving Disaster (2006); Telford's Change (1979); Telltale (1993); The 60s: The Beatles Decade (2006); The Big Game (1995); The Black Stuff (1980); The Bounty (1984); The Boys & Girl from County Clare (2003); The Breaker (2014); The Chain (1984); The Children's Rebellion (1985); The Criminal (1999); The Crumblegiant (2007); The Deal (2004); The Death Train (1998); The Devil: An Unauthorised Biography (1998); The First Part of Henry the Sixth (1983); The Fremantle Conspiracy (1988); The Gambling Man (1995); The Ghost and the Darkness (1996); The Glamour Girls (1980); The Great White Mountain (1986); The Greatest (2001); The Grid (2004); The Hunt for Jill Dando's Killer (2003); The Kid (2010); The King's Speech: Revealed (2011); The Last Tommy (2005); The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse (2005); The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse: Deleted Scenes (2005); The Long March to Freedom (2011); The Lord of the Rings: Aragorn's Quest (2010); The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003); The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age (2004); The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002); The Loss of Sexual Innocence (1998); The Making of 'the Bounty' (1984); The Mill on the Floss (1997); The Moor (2023); The Responder (2024); The Sailor's Return (1978); The Scorpion King (2002); The Second Part of Henry the Sixth (1983); The Sorrows (2013); The Theban Plays by Sophocles (1986); The Third Part of Henry the Sixth (1983); The Titanic Chronicles (1999); The Wraith (2011); Timewatch (1999–2002); Titanic (1997); Titanic Explorer (1998); Titanic: Deleted Scenes (2012); Titanic: Secrets Revealed (1998); Titanic: Southampton Remembers (2012); Titanic's Final Mystery (2012); Titus: The Gorilla King (2008); Tory! Tory! Tory! (2006); True Crime (1999); Unforgotten (2015); Unforgotten Takes Us Back to the 70s (2015); Unforgotten: Building the Series (2017); Unforgotten: Domestic Turmoil (2017); Unnatural Acts (1998); Valkyrie (2008); Village Hall (1974); Warship (1977); What Is Unforgotten? (2015); What We Were Watching (2019); Wild China (2008); Wimbledon (2004); Wolf Hall (2015).

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

On this day in movie history - True Crime (1999 movie & novel):


True Crime

directed by Clint Eastwood,
written by Larry Gross, Paul Brickman and Stephen Schiff,
based on the novel by Andrew Klavan,
was released in the United States on March 19, 1999.
Music by Lennie Niehaus.


Cast:

Clint Eastwood, Isaiah Washington, LisaGay Hamilton, James Woods, Denis Leary, Bernard Hill, Diane Venora, Michael McKean, Michael Jeter, Mary McCormack, Hattie Winston, Penny Bae Bridges, Francesca Eastwood, John Finn, Laila Robins, Sydney Tamiia Poitier, Erik King, Graham Beckel, Frances Fisher, Marissa Ribisi, Christine Ebersole, Anthony Zerbe, Nancy Giles, Tom McGowan, William Windom, Don West, Lucy Liu, Dina Eastwood, Leslie Griffith, Dennis Richmond, Frank Somerville, Dan Green, Nicholas Bearde, Frances Lee McCain, Cecil Williams, Casey Lee, Jack Kehler, Colman Domingo, Linda Hoy, Danny Kovacs, Kelvin Han Yee, Kathryn Howell, Beulah Stanley, George Maguire, Bill Wattenburg, Cathy Fithian, Roland T. Abasolo, Michael Halton, Jade Marx-Berti, Velica Marie Davis, John B. Scott, Edward Silva, Jordan Sax, Rob Reece, Walter Brown, Carmen Molinari, Annie Coffey, Bob Dini, Jodi Fung, Annie Lore, Marcus J. Oliver, Ray Raffaini.

Recommended reading:


True Crime

By Andrew Klavan.

Filmed as True Crime (1999), directed by Clint Eastwood.

Published by Dell.
First published 1995.
Mass Market Paperback.
ISBN-10: 0440224039
ISBN-13: 978-0440224037

Description:

In the heat of the city, a man is out of time: speeding in a beat-up Ford Tempo, blasting easy-listening music. Reporter Steve Everett drinks too much, makes love to his boss's wife, and has just stumbled upon a shocking truth: a convicted killer is about to be executed for a crime he didn't commit.

In the cold confines of Death Row, Frank Beachum is also out of time. Ready to say good-bye to the wife and child he loves and hello to the God he still believes in, Beachum knows he did not kill a convenience store clerk six years ago.  But in a few hours – if Steve Everett can't find the evidence to stop it – a needle is going to pierce Frank Beachum's skin.

The killing machine is primed. The executioner is waiting. And so is the priest. Now the clock is ticking down and the race is on – between the reporter and his demons, between the system and its lethal flaws, between the last innocent man and society's ultimate crime. . . .