Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Scottish Mussel. 967 likes. Scottish Mussel is a rom-com starring Talulah Riley, Martin Compston & Joe Thomas. In select Scottish cinemas 23rd Sept and on DVD & Digital HD 17th Oct.

  2. 26 giu 2015 · Ritchie is a Glaswegian chancer with low hopes and no prospects. Disillusioned with city life, he goes undercover at a Highland conservation centre to make his fortune as an illegal pearl fisher with the help of his two hapless and accident prone mates, Danny and Fraser. Here he meets Beth, a pretty English conservationist passionate about ...

  3. Ritchie is a Glaswegian chancer with low hopes and no prospects. Disillusioned with city life, he goes undercover at a Highland conservation centre to make his fortune as an illegal pearl fisher with the help of his two hapless and accident-prone mates, Danny and Fraser.

  4. Ritchie (Martin Compston - Filth, Line of Duty) is a Glaswegian chancer with low hopes and no prospects. Disillusioned with city life, he goes undercover at a Highland conservation centre to make his fortune as an illegal pearl fisher with the help of his two hapless and accident-prone mates, Danny (Joe Thomas - The Inbetweeners) and Fraser (Paul Brannigan - The Angel's Share, Sunshine on ...

  5. Scottish Mussel is a 2015 comedy film, written, directed and produced by Talulah Riley that revolves around the life of a Glaswegian criminal, Ritchie , who becomes interested in poaching freshwater pearl mussels from rivers in the Highlands of Scotland. During the course of his criminal enterprise, he falls in love with Beth, played by Riley, who is a conservationist from England.

  6. 23 giu 2015 · Scottish Mussel was a ridiculous film to make for a first time film: low budget, with a short time scale, but had multiple locations, children and animals.

  7. 26 giu 2015 · Scottish Mussel is finally dredging the bottom and coming up empty. Every cliché is employed in an attempt to join that familiar cinematic canon, but while actor Paul Brannigan in a gang of cheeky weegies might call to mind Ken Loach ’s exemplary Angel’s Share , Talulah Riley’s directorial debut lacks that film’s subtlety, believability and wit.