Wednesday 21 October 2009

The Boat That Rocked

Producer

The producer of "The boat that rocked" was Tim Bevan,Eric Fellner and Hillary Bevan Jones. With Debra Hayward and Liza Chasin were acting executive producers.

Idea

The idea for the film originated because In 1966, the government-backed British Broadcasting Company (BBC) broadcast barely two hours of rock and pop music every week over the U.K. radio airwaves; by comparison, 571 American radio stations were showcasing such music 24 hours a day. So in the home country of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones and The Who, at the height of British pop music’s greatest era, the only way 25 million people – over half the British population – could hear their music (and other favorites) at any time was to tune in to…a boat.

Bringing the music home were rogue rock-and-roll deejays broadcasting from ships and marine structures anchored just outside U.K. territorial waters. But the pirate radio stations were targeted by the government, which did its very best (or, worst) to suppress the (technically illegal) transmissions coming from the waters into the hearts and souls of millions of Brits.

From that jumping-off point, in Pirate Radio writer/director Richard Curtis continues his cinematic explorations of the most telling and/or hilarious moments of love and friendship. The new movie is the first of his screenplays to be set in the past.

“For the last ten years, I’ve been thinking about it as a subject to explore,”-Film maker After completing work on his directorial debut, Love Actually, Curtis again found himself reflecting on childhood memories of nights spent staying up late and listening to The Kinks, Jimi Hendrix, Dusty Springfield, Janis Joplin, and Aretha Franklin – to name but a few – and the larger-than-life personalities providing patter and platters.

“Every person in my generation has the same memory,” recalls Curtis. “You would go to bed at night, put your transistor radio underneath your pillow, switch it on with its little glowing light -- and stay up late to hear this fantastic music and voices you could not hear elsewhere. Your parents would shout from downstairs, ‘Go to sleep! Turn off the light!’ It was one of the things that made me love pop music most, that slight sense of it being illicit and illegal.”

The soundtrack of his youth had earlier infused the soundtrack of Love Actually, where he carefully chose songs by Joni Mitchell, Darlene Love, Paul Anka and Lennon & McCartney, among others. To even more fully embrace his love of music from the 1960s, he would set his new movie in 1966 on a pirate radio ship and ensure that even more of his favorite songs made up the soundtrack.

Music supervisor Nick Angel was reunited with Curtis on the new film, as they sought to bring some of the best sounds from the 1960s back for a big-screen voyage. Angel comments, “Richard wore his heart on his sleeve for this film, and the music is an integral part of it. My job was to make sure that we got the songs he wanted in the film.”

Director

The director for the film was Richard Curtis, he has directed other successful working title films

such as "Notting Hill","Bridget Jones's diary".He is mostly known for directing Romantic Comedy's. Because he has made other well known Working Title films the institution brought him in to direct as well as write The boat that rocked because they trusted him.


Location


The setting of the boat that rocked was in international waters on the coast of England. The main setting is Britain.


Casting


Music

I've grown up in the era when music became more or less free. This means I can usually avoid iTunes — sorry, Steve — in order to download bootlegs (or mashups, if we're talking cover songs). It feels a little like cheating. But who cares if you're taking a page from classic rock's rulebreakers?

I'm talking about the people who pirated radio, a historical highpoint that's explored in a a British movie that lands stateside today. Though I haven't seen the flick, the history behind it is worth endorsing: In England during the early 1960s, rock bands including that little one named after some insects were blowing eardrums — just not on the radio. By law and tradition, much of it was considered unbroadcastable. So a couple of scallywags figured out a way to beat the system.

Radio Caroline and, soon, other stations began to broadcast from boats anchored in international waters, just offshore, to avoid the pesky bureaucrats that controlled radio programming. For these rule-breakers, we have much to be thankful for: The Who, for one. Same with the Stones, who produced this lovely song that was the first played on Radio Caroline. We also owe pirate radio for the proliferation of the Beatles, which means those swashbucklers deserve a pat on the back for modern pop music as a whole.

In these digital days, you can still stream modern Caroline online (and scour the archives), as well as other guerilla stations (offshore or otherwise) that get as specific as Trinidadian Rock (if this DJ is online when you are). But modern piracy is generally a one-person affair — no jockeying necessary — so allow me to remind you of the unending powers of The Hype Machine, the mp3 aggregator that rules — or at least curates — the digital-music world. In an era when pirates are once again the bad guys (or are they?), their bloggers are some vagrants we'd love at our next party. That is, if they bring The Who. Or, better, who's next.


Genre

The Boat That Rocked is a british comedy.

Location

The Boat That Rocked is a fictitious comedy set in Britain during 1966 in an era when the BBC, the only UK mainland licensed radio broadcaster (Manx Radio had already been licensed to serve the Isle of Man), played little more than two hours of any kind of recorded music each week. In the story a pirate station called Radio Rock began broadcasting rock music twenty-four hours a day from a boat anchored off the coast of England in international waters. Hosted by a colourful band of disc-jockeys, it soon gains an audience of millions and angers the government in the process. While the story does have some relationship to real events it does not represent any specific station that was broadcasting to Britain in 1966, although Radio Caroline has a page on the subject.

Filming Location

Gambardella's Cafe, Blackheath Standard, London, England, UK

London, England, UK

National Gallery, Trafalgar Square, St James's, London, England, UK

Osprey Quay, Isle of Portland, Portland, Dorset, England, UK

Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
(studio)

Portland Bill, Dorset, England, UK

Portland, Dorset, England, UK

Roupell Street, Waterloo, London, England, UK

Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England, UK
(studio)

Squerryes Court, Kent, England, UK
(Sir Alistair Dormandy's home)

The Beach, Brighton, East Sussex, England, UK
(Seafront)


 Filming took place on the former Dutch hospital ship Timor Challenger, previously De Hoop, moored in Portland HarbourDorset; the "North Sea" scenes were shot off Portland Bill, while boat interior shots were filmed inside a warehouse in Osprey Quay on the Isle of Portland[5][6] and at Shepperton Studios.[7] Some of the authentic 1960s-vintage studio equipment seen in the film was ex-Radio Caroline, having been used on the MV Ross Revenge in the 1980s and loaned to the film's production company by the ship's current owners, along with numerous fixtures and fittings that were used for set decoration. (The ship used for exterior filming was also fitted with a dummy twin-mast aerial resembling the Ross Revenge's post-1988 antenna system, although all of the real pirate radio ships of the 1960s used single-mast antennas.)[citation needed]

On 28 April 2008 scenes were shot on Roupell Street in Waterloo, London, with the Kings Arms re-named the Red Lion for filming purposes


Budget

The films budget was £50 million.Gross revenue was £31,146,683.