source ThePeoplesMovies
To anyone not Scottish you maybe wondering what the hell is a Ned?! To make things a little clearer a ned is the closest thing to a English Chav, both have smilar backgrounds, history’s etc.. Now thanks to E1 Entertainment via our good friends at HeyUguys (Happy 2nd Birthday!) Peter Mullin’s Film Festival winning movie NEDS (Non Educated Deliquents) the first trailer has been released and you can check out the trailer below.
.Scottish actor/ director (who is also the patron of my towns film society Paisley) is proud of his routes and when it comes to creating movies about his background he is one of the best, I may not agree with him politically but as in creating a part of Scottish life he is one of the best.Even though this movie is based in Scotland and Glasgow in 1970′s gang culture is the same anywhere in the world but sadly in some areas its worse than others. As for Scotland it still exists but sadly its more religous related than what area of a town you come from these days.
NEDS will be out in UK & Ireland on January 21st, 2011, trailer and synopsis after the break....
A powerful and thought provoking drama set in 1970s Glasgow, written and directed by the critically acclaimed Peter Mullan and introducing extraordinary newcomer Conor McCarron (John McGill). Neds is already the winner of Best Film and Best Actor at the 2010 San Sebastian Film Awards and played in a Gala slot at the London Film Festival, where Conor McCarron was also nominated for Best British Newcomer.
Glasgow, 1973. On the brink of adolescence, young John McGill is about to start secondary school. He is a bright and sensitive boy, eager to learn, but the cards are stacked against him. The McGill family is working class. His hated father is a drunken bully. His teachers – punishing John for the ‘sins’ of his older brother Benny – are down on him from the start. John is on his own.
And then there are the gangs. The NEDS – Non-Educated Delinquents. The bad boys with weapons and attitude: cheap drugs, glam rock, fumbling sex, the violence and the camaraderie of the streets. Local monsters. Local heroes. Benny’s fearsome reputation buys John protection, and then a way in. Scared, resentful, full of rage, John makes his decision. If no one else will give him a chance: fuck them.
John takes to the savage life of the streets with a vengeance. But as his rage and frustration spin him further and further out of control, he is left facing a blank wall. No future. With one extraordinary chance of redemption.
Peter Mullan is an actor, writer and director. His many acting credits include My Name is Joe (Ken Loach) for which he won Best Actor at Cannes in 1998, the critically acclaimed Red Riding Trilogy, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One, Children of Men and Michael Winterbottom’s The Claim. Peter will soon be seen in the upcoming Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part Two and is currently filming Stephen Spielberg’s War Horse. As director Peter has made two other features including Orphans in 1997 and The Magdalene Sisters in 2001 which won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 2002.
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