Whats Happening to Me Stop Talking Big Heads 2012 Stitches

2012 film

Stitches
Stitches 2012 movie poster.jpg

United kingdom/Irish theatrical release affiche

Directed by Conor McMahon[two]
Written by
  • Conor McMahon
  • David O' Brien
Produced by
  • Julianne Forde
  • Brendan McCarthy
  • John McDonnell
  • Ruth Treacy
Starring
  • Tommy Knight
  • Ross Noble
  • Gemma-Leah Devereux
  • Shane Murray Corcoran
  • Thommas Kane Byrne
  • Eoghan McQuinn
  • Roisin Barron
  • Hugh Mulhern
  • John McDonnell
  • Tommy Cullen
  • Lorna Dempsey
  • Jemma Curran
  • Ryan Burke
Cinematography Patrick Jordan
Edited by Chris Gill
Music past Paul McDonnell

Product
companies

  • Fantastic Films
  • Tailored Films
  • Solid Amusement
Distributed past
  • MPI Media Group
  • Irish Film Lath
  • Signature Entertainment

Release date

  • 26 October 2012 (2012-10-26) (Uk)

Running time

86 minutes
Countries
  • Ireland[1]
  • Sweden[1]
  • United Kingdom[1]
Language English
Budget $1.v 1000000[3]
Box office $xc,995[3]

Stitches is a 2012 comedy slasher film directed past Conor McMahon and written by McMahon and David O'Brien. Information technology stars Ross Noble, Tommy Knight and Gemma-Leah Devereux, with Shane Murray Corcoran, Thomas Kane Byrne, Eoghan McQuinn, Roisin Barron, Hugh Mulhern, John McDonnell, Tommy Cullen, Lorna Dempsey, Jemma Curran, and Ryan Shush in supporting roles.[4] The plot concerns a birthday clown returning from the expressionless to exact revenge upon a boy and a group of children/teenager who contributed to his death.

The film was produced by Fantastic Films and Tailored Films in 2012 and marks the flick debut of Tommy Knight and stand-upwardly comedian Ross Noble.[5] [half-dozen]

The film is an international co-production between Ireland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.[1] McMahon began working on the film after receiving a €600,000 grant from the Irish Film Board, also utilising funding from MEDIA Europe.[7] Filming for the moving picture took place in Ireland.[eight]

Stitches premiered in Dublin, Ireland in September 2012 and was theatrically released in the United Kingdom on 26 October 2012.[9]

Plot [edit]

Richard Grindle, a clown with the stage proper noun "Stitches", is having sexual activity with a woman in his camper. During intercourse, she notices an egg encased in a glass tube with a confront painted on it. Stitches explains that "they" fabricated him do it when he signed upwardly. Stitches arrives tardily at Tommy's tenth birthday party. He attempts to entertain the children, but they instead ridicule him. Tommy'southward best friend Vinnie ties Stitches' shoelaces together, and Tommy throws a soccer ball on his face, causing him to trip and land on a kitchen knife on the other side of the room, unseen to the children, which penetrates his confront. As the children come to notice out, Stitches slowly gets upwards, revealing the knife lodged in his eye. Seeing him, all of the kids scream in terror and run away. Still, Tommy stays; when Stitches removes the knife, blood gushes out of his caput. After information technology stops haemorrhage, he attempts to stab Tommy, simply to skid on a puddle of blood. Stitches falls on the flooring equally the knife falls into his centre a second time, killing him. Tommy visits Stitches' grave to put a squeaky flower on superlative, only to find a group of clowns entering an abandoned building. Tommy enters the edifice to find the clowns performing a ritual with Stitches' egg. Ane fellow member discovers Tommy and brings him to the cult's leader, The Motley. The Motley warns to Tommy that a clown who dies and never finishes the party will never rest in peace, and a joke is not as funny the second fourth dimension.

Six years later, Tommy is preparing for his sixteenth birthday. He is withal haunted by the memory of his past birthday, and begins to accept frightening hallucinations, such as a instructor turning into a clown and ripping off Vinnie's genitals before tying them to a party balloon. Hesitating at the thought of throwing a large political party, he considers instead inviting only a few friends. Ultimately, he settles on a large gathering, and Vinnie secretly distributes many more than invitations over the Internet. Tommy, Vinnie, Richie and Bulger, all of whom had been present when Stitches died, ready the firm. As the guests, including Tommy's childhood crush Kate, arrive for the political party, Stitches comes back to life and leaves his grave.

Tommy, startled by Paul dressed as a clown, injures his caput. Bulger goes to observe Tommy a first-aid kit, while Tommy retreats to his treehouse followed by Kate. There, Tommy discusses his memories of the ritual he had encountered as a child. Meanwhile, Paul is attacked by Stitches, who rips off his ear and one of his arms and pulls a live rabbit out of his throat before kicking his head off. The clown and then finds Bulger, opens up his skull with a can opener, and removes his encephalon with an ice cream scooper. Sarah, Paul'due south girlfriend, enters the attic to look for him. There, she is attacked by Stitches, and manages to fight back. As she tries to escape, Stitches drives an umbrella through her skull, killing her. Through his telescope, Tommy sees Stitches in the house, and goes to warn Vinnie of his presence, simply is at start unsuccessful, due to Vinnie'south desire to take sex with a formerly overweight classmate. Tommy tries to warn Kate and the other partygoers, but they don't believe him.

Exterior, Stitches attacks Richie. Richie attempts to flee but trips and falls. Stitches rips out his intestines and fashions them into a airship creature before stabbing him with a cycle pump and inflating him. Stitches manages to pump enough air into Richie to cause his head to explode. Vinnie, on discovering Tommy to be telling the truth, attempts to leave, just Stitches attacks them. Tommy stabs him, Vinnie covers him with a blanket, and they escape. Tommy and Vinnie rescue Kate, but Stitches knocks her unconscious equally they endeavor to escape. Tom tries to resuscitate her, and Vinnie leaves them backside, and Stitches attempts to drown Tommy in a sink that Vinnie had previously vomited in. Kate awakens and throws a knife at Stitches, while Tommy deduces a manner in which to defeat the clown; to kill him, they must destroy the egg he kept in his van. Tommy and Kate, pursued by Stitches, brand their way to the den in the graveyard. While hiding, Tommy begins to hiccup, and Kate kisses him in club for him to stay quiet. Tommy searches for Stitches' egg amidst a drove of them while Kate keeps an eye out for Stitches, but the pair are before long discovered by him. While deciding which of the two to impale, Vinnie ties Stitches' shoelaces together once more. He trips, and drops his egg. Tommy forces Stitches to smash the egg, and Stitches explodes in a mixture of magic trick supplies and yolk.

Six months subsequently, Tommy has moved to a new firm and is dating Kate. While the couple are in Tommy'due south former treehouse, Kate gives Tommy a new telescope, and his former one is positioned and then every bit to focus on the den in the graveyard. There, The Motley is attempting to piece Stitches' broken egg back together. The egg is now fully restored indicating that Stitches will return. After the film cuts to black, Stitches' catchphrase, "Everybody happy?", is heard.

Bandage [edit]

  • Tommy Knight equally Tommy
    • Ryan Shush as Young Tommy, 10 years quondam
  • Ross Noble every bit Richard "Stitches" Grindle
  • Gemma-Leah Devereux as Kate
  • Shane Murray Corcoran equally Vinnie
  • Thommas Kane Byrne as Bulger
  • Eoghan McQuinn equally Richie
  • Roisin Barron as Sarah
  • Hugh Mulhern as Paul
  • John McDonnell every bit The Motley
  • Tommy Cullen as Dan
  • Lorna Dempsey every bit Mary
  • Jemma Curran as Jenny

Production [edit]

McMahon began working on Stitches after receiving a €600,000 grant from the Irish Film Board, also utilizing funding from MEDIA Europe.[7] Filming for the movie took place in Ireland.[eight]

Soundtrack [edit]

The score was composed past Paul McDonnell. "Dream Conjecture" was written and performed by Jonathan van Atom. The film's soundtrack also features the 1986 song "(I Just) Died in Your Arms" by the English language stone ring Cutting Coiffure. The party scene also features the song "Funk Epidemic", written by Danny Groenland, Conor Doherty and Ken McCabe and performed by Irish gaelic group Mob Fandango.

Release [edit]

Stitches premiered in Dublin, Republic of ireland in September 2012.[9] It received a limited theatrical release in the U.S. under the distributor Dark Heaven Films, and in Japan under Shochiku. The Japanese title of the picture show translates as The Dead Clown Goes Mad.[ citation needed ] In France, the film's title is Dark Clown.[10] [xi]

Reception [edit]

Critical reception [edit]

Starburst rated it six/10 stars.[12] Entertainment.ie rated information technology iii stars and commented on the influence of "80s slasher flicks" on the picture show.[13] Encarmine Disgusting wrote that the film was "destined to become a cult archetype" and carried "heavy replay value".[14] Dread Central in particular praised the pic'due south kill scenes, calling them "brilliant" and remarking that they were done "with such a rigorous sense of care and item".[xv] Criticisms for the motion-picture show revolved around the film being "an incredibly depression upkeep production" and the plot being "nowhere nigh equally fun as it sounds on paper".[14] [16] Screen Daily commented that the "horror stuff is obvious, but staged with showstopping flair and buckets of blood".[17]

Awards [edit]

List of awards and nominations
Award Category Nominee Result
Fright-Fest 2012 and Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival 2012 Best Death and Midnight X-Treme Conor McMahon (Director) Fantastic Films (production company) Tailored Films (product company) - Conor McMahon Won

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Stitches (2012)". British Movie Establish . Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  2. ^ "Conor McMahon Casts British Comedian Ross Noble in 'Stitches'". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Stitches (2012)". The Numbers . Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  4. ^ Oden, Ike. "STITCHES DOES KILLER CLOWNS THE United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland WAY". JoBlo. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  5. ^ Kemp, Stuart. "British Stand-Up Ross Noble'southward Movie Acting Debut 'Stitches' Gets U.M., Republic of ireland Distribution". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved nineteen Oct 2012.
  6. ^ Clarke, Donald. "Killer punchlines". Irish Times. Retrieved nineteen October 2012.
  7. ^ a b "Conor McMahon'southward 'Stitches' To Receive Irish and Uk Cinema Release". IFTN. Retrieved 19 Oct 2012.
  8. ^ a b McNary, Dave. "Fantastic, MPI in 'Stitches' bargain". Multifariousness. Retrieved 19 Oct 2012.
  9. ^ a b "Conor McMahon'due south 'Stitches' To Receive Dublin Premiere". IFTN. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  10. ^ "Night Clown - motion-picture show 2012". AlloCiné (in French). Retrieved i June 2017.
  11. ^ Damien Taymans. "Dark Clown - Stitches (2012)". Cinemafantastique.net (in French). Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  12. ^ "Flick Review: STITCHES". Starburst Magazine. Retrieved nineteen Oct 2012.
  13. ^ "Review: Stitches". entertainment.ie. Retrieved xix Oct 2012.
  14. ^ a b "[BD Review: Clown Slasher 'Stitches' Destined To Get A Cult Classic!!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 19 Oct 2012.
  15. ^ "Review: Stitches (2012)". Dread Central. Retrieved 19 Oct 2012.
  16. ^ "Sitges 2012 Dispatch: Bedlamite Crowds, STITCHES and Piece AND Die: THE SLASHER FILM FOREVER". Twitch Pic. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  17. ^ Newman, Kim. "Stitches". Screen Daily. Retrieved 19 October 2012.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Stitches at IMDb
  • Stitches at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Tailored Films Website

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stitches_(2012_film)

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