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Breaking and Entering

 
Movies:

Breaking and Entering

  • Director: Anthony Minghella
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Urban Drama, Family Drama
  • Themes: Class Differences, Romantic Betrayal, Mothers and Sons
  • Main Cast: Jude Law, Juliette Binoche, Robin Wright Penn, Martin Freeman, Ray Winstone
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US/UK
  • Run Time: 118 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A petty thief is the link between a well-to-do businessman and a single mother struggling to get by in his edgy, emotional drama. Will Francis (Jude Law) is a successful landscape architect who runs an upscale business with his friend Sandy (Martin Freeman) in the King's Cross section of London, a neighborhood that has long been plagued by crime and poverty but has lately become the target of a major gentrification program. Will's longtime girlfriend is Liv (Robin Wright Penn), a lovely woman troubled by a lack of communication between herself and her husband and emotional problems with their teenage daughter, Bea (Poppy Rogers), who can't sleep and is obsessed with gymnastics. A thief has broken into Will and Sandy's office not once but twice, taking Will's laptop and the company's computer equipment, and Will begins spending his evenings at the shop in hopes of catching the culprit in action. The burglar strikes a third time, and while giving chase, Will sees him make his way into a shabby apartment building. Will learns the criminal is Miro (Rafi Gavron), a 15-year-old refugee from Bosnia. Without revealing what he knows, Will makes the acquaintance of Amira (Juliette Binoche), Miro's widowed mother -- a Bosnian refugee who makes a living as a seamstress. As Will starts bringing Amira business on a regular basis, the two begin an affair which continues even as Will maintains his relationship with Liv. Breaking and Entering was written and directed by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Anthony Minghella; it was his first project made from his own original script since Truly, Madly, Deeply in 1991. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Vera Farmiga - Oana; Rafi Gavron - Miro; Mark Benton; Poppy Rogers - Bea; Juliet Stevenson - Rosemary

Credit

Andy Nicholson - Art Director, Steven E. Andrews - Associate Producer, Michelle Guish - Casting, Gaby Kester - Casting, Nick Ingman - Conductor, Natalie Ward - Costume Designer, Steven E. Andrews - First Assistant Director, Anthony Minghella - Director, Tim Bricknell - Second Unit Director, Lisa Gunning - Editor, Bob Weinstein - Executive Producer, Harvey Weinstein - Executive Producer, Colin Vaines - Executive Producer, Ivana Primorac - Hair Styles, Julie Dartnell - Hair Styles, Julie Thom - Hair Styles, Abi Brotherton - Hair Styles, Jonah Coombes - Location Manager, Anita Overland - Line Producer, Gabriel Yared - Composer (Music Score), Underworld - Composer (Music Score), Mike Gillespie - Musical Direction/Supervision, Ivana Primorac - Makeup, Julie Dartnell - Makeup, Julie Thom - Makeup, Abi Brotherton - Makeup, Alex McDowell - Production Designer, Benoit Delhomme - Cinematographer, Lisa DiNardo Parker - Production Manager, Anthony Minghella - Producer, Sydney Pollack - Producer, Tim Bricknell - Producer, Jim Greenhorn - Sound/Sound Designer, Steve Dent - Stunts Coordinator, Richard Conway - Special Effects Supervisor, Steve Paton - Special Effects Supervisor, Anthony Minghella - Screenwriter, Simon Finney - Second Unit Camera, Viktor Muller - Visual Effects Supervisor, John Colley - Gaffer, Clare Maclean - Post Production Supervisor, Clara McGowan - Production Coordinator, Gordon Fitzgerald - Properties Master, Mike Prestwood Smith - Re-Recording Mixer, Sven Taits - Re-Recording Mixer, Matthew Gough - Re-Recording Mixer, Jamie Roden - Re-Recording Mixer, Dianne Dreyer - Script Supervisor, Anthony Wilcox - Second Assistant Director, Alastair Rae - Steadicam Operator, Eddy Joseph - Supervising Sound Editor, Vit Komrzy - Visual Effects Producer, Guy Barker - Production Accountant, Universal Production Partners Prague - Visual Effects, Anna Pinnock - Set Decorator, Tom Hingston Studio - Title Design

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Wikipedia: Breaking and Entering (film)
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Breaking and Entering

Breaking and Entering Original Film Poster
Directed by Anthony Minghella
Produced by Timothy Bricknell
Anthony Minghella
Sydney Pollack
Written by Anthony Minghella
Starring Jude Law
Juliette Binoche
Robin Wright Penn
Music by Gabriel Yared
Underworld
Cinematography Benoît Delhomme
Editing by Lisa Gunning
Distributed by - USA -
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
The Weinstein Company
- non-USA -
Miramax Films
The Weinstein Company
- Canada Theatrical -
Alliance Films
Release date(s) December 15, 2006
Running time 116 minutes
Country United Kingdom UK
United States USA
Language English
Gross revenue $928,960 (USA only)
£906,816 (UK only)

Breaking and Entering, is a British 2006 romantic drama film, was Academy Award-winning director Anthony Minghella's first original screenplay since his 1991 feature debut, Truly, Madly, Deeply.

The film stars Jude Law – whom Minghella directed in Cold Mountain and The Talented Mr. Ripley – and Juliette Binoche, from The English Patient, also directed by Anthony Minghella, and Chocolat.

In a major supporting role, Robin Wright Penn plays Liv, the long-standing girlfriend of Will (Jude Law's character).

Set in a blighted, inner-city neighbourhood of London, Breaking and Entering examines an affair which unfolds between a successful British landscape architect and Amira, a Bosnian woman – the mother of a troubled teen son – who was widowed by the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Rafi Gavron, in his first major film role, portrays Miro. The role, that of a young traceur, and the burglar to which the film's title partly alludes, requires Gavron to perform several difficult physical feats.

It is a presentation of Miramax Films and The Weinstein Company and was distributed in the U.S. by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Breaking and Entering premièred on September 13, 2006 at the Toronto International Film Festival.[1]

Contents

Plot

Will Francis (Jude Law), a young Englishman, is a landscape architect living a detached, routine-based life in London with his Swedish-American girlfriend Liv (Robin Wright Penn) and her behaviourally challenged daughter Bea. The 13-year-old girl's irregular sleeping and eating habits as well as her unsocial behaviour (she has trouble relating to people and seems only interested in doing somersaults and practising her gymnastics) reach worrying proportions and start to put a lot of strain on Will and Liv's relationship. Complicating the situation further is his feeling of being shut out of their inner circle since Bea is not his biological daughter. He and Liv start relationship counselling, but their drifting apart continues.

Simultaneously on the business front, Will's and his partner Sandy's state-of-the-art offices in the Kings Cross area are repeatedly burgled by a group of Slavic language speaking thieves. The thieves employ a 15-year-old traceur named Miro (Rafi Gavron) whose acrobatic skills allow them to enter the building. Miro is actually a refugee from Bosnia living with his Muslim mother Amira (Juliette Binoche) who works as a seamstress while his Serbian father got murdered during the war.

Though they're puzzled about the burglars' ability to disable the alarm, the two architects are not particularly worried after the first break-in, mostly writing it off to the neighbourhood's dodgy reputation. However, after the second one they decide to stake out the building after hours hoping to find the culprit and alert the police. Being out of the house on nightly stakeouts actually suits Will just fine, allowing him to get away from the cold atmosphere of his household. He even strikes up a strange acquaintance with an Eastern European prostitute named Oana (Vera Farmiga) who hangs around the area every night. Spotting Miro attempting to break in one night, Will attempts to follow him. This pursuit leads Will to the flat where Miro lives with his mother Amira. Realizing their modest living means, he decides not to report his findings to the police, but goes back to Amira's apartment under the guise of having a suit that needs mending.

He soon becomes emotionally entangled with her, causing him to re-evaluate his life. Conflict arises when the police close in on the burglars, and Will must make a crucial choice which will affect the lives of everyone around him.

Cast

Jude Law and Juliette Binoche experience an avalanche of conflicting emotion in "Breaking and Entering."

Primary cast

Supporting Cast

Filming Locations

The film centres on the area of King's Cross, London. The filming location for Amira's flat is Rowley Way, South Hampstead, London. Since a suitable location near Kings Cross couldn't be found, Will's office was recreated in an old foundry located in Dace Road, by the Old Ford Lock, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets [2]. Other locations include Primrose Hill, Camden Lock Market, Hackney Wick, Alexandra Palace, and Muswell Hill.

Soundtrack

Soundtrack

Breaking and Entering
Soundtrack by Gabriel Yared and Underworld
Released November 6, 2006 (UK)
December 5, 2006 (USA)
Recorded 2006, Abbey Road Studios, London, UK
Genre Film soundtrack
Length 57:13
Label V2 Records

Gabriel Yared and Underworld collaborated on the film's original music score.

Trivia

  • The techniques used to burgle Green Effect come from parkour, a physical discipline and recreational activity of French origin whose practitioners are called traceurs. Sometimes confused with free running, a related discipline derived from parkour, the art, as it is called by some practitioners, has gained in popularity in urban areas, particularly in Europe, during the early 21st century.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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