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Eva Green wears all-black as she films scenes for Apple TV+ s first French language original Liaison
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Cast of TV series arrive at Mountbatten House in Basing View
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Apple Orders First French Language Original Series Liaison
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WHAT IT S ABOUT:
A teenage girl struggles to take care of herself and her younger brother after they are abandoned by their single mother.
WHAT WE THOUGHT:
It s very difficult to describe the feeling I felt after watching
Rocks. It was an extremely heartbreaking and real story, but it was still compelling – and dare I say it, fun to watch.
Rocks is unlike anything you ve seen before and the type of film that you will remember for years to come.
The film follows Olushola (Bukky Bukray), nicknamed Rocks, after she defended her best friend from bullies, as she spends time with her friends. She comes home from school one day to find out that her mom is gone, and all she left Rocks with is a little money for food and a note telling her to take care of her little brother. Through the way Rocks reacts, we are led to believe that her mother has done this before and has come back. However, this time she stays away for a while, and Rocks has to constantly be hustling to try and loo
How Lucy Pardee spots future film stars in the wild
What made Attack the Block or Bafta favourite Rocks so special? Lucy Pardee s uniquely anthropological brand of street casting
Bukky Bakray has been nominated for a BAFTA
Rocks is the little film that could. It felt like an industry coup even before it was nominated for a whopping eight Baftas (more than any other title) yesterday. Shot in London in 2018, with the lead cast populated by young people who had never acted before, with a story (by Theresa Ikoko and Claire Wilson) shaped around them, it’s a miracle of a film, I suggest to its casting director Lucy Pardee. “It is a miracle,” she says. “The further I get away from the making of it, the more I can see just how special it is.”