Ten Dead Men

Ten Dead Men is a 2008 thriller film directed by Ross Boyask, produced by Phil Hobden, and starring Brendan Carr, Terry Stone, Doug Bradley, Pooja Shah, Ben Shockley, Lee Latchford-Evans, JC Mac, and Tom Gerald. It is the follow-up to the cult independent film Left for Dead. Produced by the same company, (Modern Life?) Ten Dead Men features many of the same actors as its predecessor. Ten Dead Men was The film released in UK, France, Indonesia and Japan.

Ten Dead Men
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRoss Boyask
Produced byPhil Hobden
Screenplay byChris Regan
Story byRoss Boyask & Phil Hobden
StarringBrendan Carr, Terry Stone, Doug Bradley, Pooja Shah, Ben Shockley, Lee Latchford-Evans, JC Mac, Tom Gerald
Music byScott Benzie
CinematographyDarren Berry
Edited byRoss Boyask
Distributed byIFM Worldwide Releasing LLC
Release date
  • 26 April 2008 (2008-04-26) (Fighting Spirit Film Festival)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
BudgetUS$250,000

Synopsis

As the film begins, Ryan has spent years putting his brutal past behind him—a different man now to the stone cold killer he was a lifetime ago. But when an old face from the past arrives on his doorstep, Ryan is called upon to repay a blood debt from years ago. But the price is too high. Betrayed, and with his life falling apart around him, Ryan goes on a murderous, bloody revenge spree against the Ten Men who took his life away from him.

Cast

ActorRole
Brendan Carr (actor)Ryan
Pooja ShahAmy
Doug BradleyNarrator
Ben ShockleyKeller
John RackhamAxel
Keith EylesProjects Manager
JC MacParker
Jason Lee HydeGarrett
Tom GeraldBruiser
Lee Latchford-EvansHarris
Jason MazaBoulder
Silvio SimacLoomis

Production

It took 18 months from production starting to finishing filming. The film's action was handled by Hong Kong fight director/stunt man Jude Poyer who has worked alongside actors such as Jet Li and Jean-Claude Van Damme on a host of US and Asian action films.

The film stars actor/martial artist Brendan Carr, Terry Stone, Pooja Shah, Ben Shockley, Lee Latchford-Evans, JC Mac, Tom Gerald, and Phil Hobden. Doug Bradley provides the film's voiceover narration.

The film also features cameos from actor/musician/entertainer Chico, MMA fighter Kimo, Dave Legeno, Cage Rage promoter Dave O'Donnell, Silvio Simac, Cecily Fay and Glenn Salvage.

Critical reaction

The production of Ten Dead Men was tracked in regular articles in Impact Magazine, written by the film's producer Phil Hobden. Impact Magazine was given the first review of the film.

"This is passionate genre filmmaking inspired by… Rodriguez and the hard-hitting but playful style of Quentin Tarantino" Richard Hawes, Facebook Movies

"The film easily clubs aside any British alternative… this is revenge actually, a dish served cold and bloody, littered with plenty of limbs and shrapnel" Rich Badley, Close-Up Film

"Fusing action, drama and violence into a blistering whole, Ten Dead Men shows us Brits can hold our own in the action arena." Andrew Skeats

"…well directed, great writing, incredible fight scenes and a star making performance from Carr all adding up to one of the best British action movies of the decade. " Will Strong, Combat Magazine

Locations

Ten Dead Men is set in an unnamed fictional town, but in reality was filmed mostly in London and Brighton. Notable locations in the film included Bovingdon, Buckinghamshire and in and around the streets and the seafront of Brighton.[1]

gollark: > 4) this set of bylaws can be modified by the council with unanimous agreement
gollark: <#821522631269548092> suggests we can't, but I guess we can just ignore it.
gollark: Does GEORGE policy actually allow us to alter GEORGE policy without agreement from all council members?
gollark: I've been in communication with someone who has been in communication with someone who says they are at least not *dead*, but also anomalously not on the internet.
gollark: Well, heav has been entirely nonexistent on all platforms I can reach them on. So maybe they should be shifted to absentee status somehow.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.