Antonio's Breakfast is a 2006 Brixton set drama short film written and directed by Daniel Mulloy. It premiered in Sundance Film Festival[1] and went on to win the BAFTA Award for Best Short Film.[2]
Antonio's Breakfast | |
---|---|
Directed by | Daniel Mulloy |
Written by | Daniel Mulloy |
Produced by | Howard Stogdon Amber Templemore-Finlayson |
Starring | George Irving Doreen Mantle Dominique Chambers Daniel Campbell Kurt Burgess Romell Holness Derion Adams |
Cinematography | Robbie Ryan |
Edited by | Dan Robinson |
Production company | Sister Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 16 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Premise
editAntonio, a young black teenager, is woken by his father's (George Irving) rasping breaths. It soon becomes clear that the young Antonio is his paralyzed father's primary care giver. As Antonio's friends arrive Antonio is forced to choose between a life lived for his father or one in which he makes his own way. His ultimate decision is one laced with uncertainty and guilt.
Production
editMulloy held castings around the Brixton and Peckham areas of London. He spent a year work-shopping with the chosen young cast members, several of whom would appear in his later films. The story of Antonio's Breakfast is built around Mulloy's childhood experiences of growing up in Brixton.
"When writing, I have a strong sense of what needs to be communicated. I then work with the artists in rehearsals until they have made the performances their own. In Antonio’s Breakfast this meant that the young guys spent time working out what they thought would feel natural for them to say and I trusted them implicitly and went with it."[3] Daniel Mulloy from Get Your Short Film Funded, Made and Seen by Tricia Tuttle
Reception
editAntonio's Breakfast premiered at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival to international critical acclaim and in the UK it went on to win the 2006 British Academy Award.
Accolades
edit- premiered Sundance Film Festival 2006
- Winner 59th British Academy Film Awards Best Short Film 2006
- Winner Grand Jury Prize Aspen Shortsfest
- Winner Indianapolis
- Winner FilmFest Kansas City
- Winner Melbourne
- Winner Indianapolis
- Special Mention Jury Award Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival
References
edit- ^ Landon Zakheim, "Short Shot: Daniel Mulloy" Archived 25 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Sundance Institute, 27 January 2011 (Retrieved 10 January 2013)
- ^ BAFTA Awards database (Retrieved 18 October 2012)
- ^ Get Your Short Film Funded, Made and Seen: The Shooting People Shorts Directory by Tricia Tuttle (quote from page no.4) (Nov 15, 2007) Archived 29 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January, 2013.
External links
editFurther reading
edit- Making Short Films : The Complete Guide from Script to Screen - Clifford Thurlow
- Get Your Short made, Funded and Filmed: The Shooting People Shorts Directory – Tricia Tuttle