Larceny (lost Christopher Nolan short film; 1996): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
MercurySG3M (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | |status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Larceny''''' is a 1996 short film directed by Christopher Nolan. The film was created over the course of a single weekend while Nolan was part of the University College London film society. He shot it using UCL film society equipment, including an Arriflex 16BL camera.<ref>[https://youtu.be/jUpA7Qma_9E?t=144 Christopher Nolan on "Following" - Conversations Inside The Criterion Collection.] Retrieved 21 Jul '21</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20100722205956/https://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uczxflm/productions/archive/9495/ UCL Film Society page (archived).] Retrieved 22 July '10</ref> Similar to his debut feature film ''Following'', it was a "no-budget" film funded solely by Nolan himself. | '''''Larceny''''' is a 1996 short film directed by Christopher Nolan. The film was created over the course of a single weekend in 1995 while Nolan was part of the University College London film society. He shot it using UCL film society equipment, including an Arriflex 16BL camera.<ref>[https://youtu.be/jUpA7Qma_9E?t=144 Christopher Nolan on "Following" - Conversations Inside The Criterion Collection.] Retrieved 21 Jul '21</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20100722205956/https://www.ucl.ac.uk/~uczxflm/productions/archive/9495/ UCL Film Society page (archived).] Retrieved 22 July '10</ref> Similar to his debut feature film ''Following'', it was a "no-budget" film funded solely by Nolan himself. | ||
The short was only shown once, at the 1996 Cambridge Film Festival.<ref>[https://www.google.com/books/edition/Christopher_Nolan/hOxzDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=christopher%20nolan%20book&pg=PA5&printsec=frontcover Christopher Nolan: A Critical Study of the Films] Retrieved 21 Jul '21</ref> | The short was only shown once, at the 1996 Cambridge Film Festival.<ref>[https://www.google.com/books/edition/Christopher_Nolan/hOxzDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=christopher%20nolan%20book&pg=PA5&printsec=frontcover Christopher Nolan: A Critical Study of the Films] Retrieved 21 Jul '21</ref> | ||
It was regarded as "one of the best (if not the best) shorts of filmsoc recent generations" by UCL film society and said to "[contain] some superb hand-held camera work, and a fast paced gripping story." | It was regarded as "one of the best (if not the best) shorts of filmsoc recent generations" by UCL film society and said to "[contain] some superb hand-held camera work, and a fast paced gripping story." | ||
The film has a runtime between 8-9 minutes, contrary to what BFI lists. This is supported by the UCL film society page and a Nolan interview | The film has a runtime between 8-9 minutes, contrary to what BFI lists.<ref>[http://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150658318 British Film Institute page for Larceny.] Retrieved 21 Jul '21</ref> This is supported by the UCL film society page and a Nolan interview conducted during the post-production of Memento.<ref>[https://chrisjonesblog.com/2010/08/exclusive-interview-with-christopher-nolan-and-emma-thomas-from-our-guerilla-film-makers-archives.html Exclusive Interview with Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas from our Guerilla Film Makers Archives.] Retrieved 10 Aug '21<ref> | ||
Multiple copies are known to still exist. In an email, Ivan Cornell confirmed he held onto a copy. Over Twitter DM, David Julyan also confirmed he owned a VHS copy of the short. Both refused to release it. Cambridge Film Festival may have a copy, but according to an email from the 1996 festival director, a search for the short was conducted a few years ago with no luck. UCL Film Society is confirmed to still possess a private copy in their archive. According to Jeremy Theobald, who lost his personal copy, Nolan still maintains tight control over the short film's rights. | |||
==Synopsis== | ==Synopsis== | ||
Christopher Nolan has consistently described the short as "about a burglary." | |||
In an exclusive interview within ''Christopher Nolan: A Critical Study of the Films'', Jeremy Theobald states the following: | |||
::[This was] unlike all the other film society scripts at the time that I'd read, which were quite surreal ... slamming doors of train on Euston Station, when ::trains had doors that could slam. This was witty. It was funny, it was pithy, and it was dark. It had a great twist at the end. [I was offered the] lead part in ::that. And that became ''Larceny'', the ten-minute short that we shot in one weekend in Chris' flat. A Saturday and a Sunday. | |||
According to the British Film Institute: | According to the British Film Institute: | ||
"A man with a bag over his head is being beaten up by a gangster but pleads mistaken identity. It turns out that he is the room-mate of the man they're looking for, who is at that moment boarding a plane out of the country." | "A man with a bag over his head is being beaten up by a gangster but pleads mistaken identity. It turns out that he is the room-mate of the man they're looking for, who is at that moment boarding a plane out of the country." | ||
Despite being an archive, this isn't a particularly reputable source given other small mistakes (including the runtime). Take this with a grain of salt. | |||
IMDb lists the synopsis as "A man who likes to pick-pocket people, gets chased through the woods by the people he's trying to steal from" but the origin of this is unknown (considering IMDb can be edited by anyone, this is likely inaccurate). | IMDb lists the synopsis as "A man who likes to pick-pocket people, gets chased through the woods by the people he's trying to steal from" but the origin of this is unknown (considering IMDb can be edited by anyone, this is likely inaccurate). | ||
Line 47: | Line 55: | ||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
*[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6386412/ IMDb page for ''Larceny (1996) | *[https://www.themoviedb.org/movie/456684-larceny/edit?active_nav_item=release_information&language=en-US TMDb page for ''Larceny'' (1996). | ||
*[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6386412/ IMDb page for ''Larceny'' (1996).] ] | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 23:24, 10 August 2021
Poster for the short film. Possibly unofficial; source of the image unknown (particularly the top half).
Status: Lost
Larceny is a 1996 short film directed by Christopher Nolan. The film was created over the course of a single weekend in 1995 while Nolan was part of the University College London film society. He shot it using UCL film society equipment, including an Arriflex 16BL camera.[1][2] Similar to his debut feature film Following, it was a "no-budget" film funded solely by Nolan himself.
The short was only shown once, at the 1996 Cambridge Film Festival.[3] It was regarded as "one of the best (if not the best) shorts of filmsoc recent generations" by UCL film society and said to "[contain] some superb hand-held camera work, and a fast paced gripping story."
The film has a runtime between 8-9 minutes, contrary to what BFI lists.[4] This is supported by the UCL film society page and a Nolan interview conducted during the post-production of Memento.<ref>Exclusive Interview with Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas from our Guerilla Film Makers Archives. Retrieved 10 Aug '21<ref>
Multiple copies are known to still exist. In an email, Ivan Cornell confirmed he held onto a copy. Over Twitter DM, David Julyan also confirmed he owned a VHS copy of the short. Both refused to release it. Cambridge Film Festival may have a copy, but according to an email from the 1996 festival director, a search for the short was conducted a few years ago with no luck. UCL Film Society is confirmed to still possess a private copy in their archive. According to Jeremy Theobald, who lost his personal copy, Nolan still maintains tight control over the short film's rights.
Synopsis
Christopher Nolan has consistently described the short as "about a burglary."
In an exclusive interview within Christopher Nolan: A Critical Study of the Films, Jeremy Theobald states the following:
- [This was] unlike all the other film society scripts at the time that I'd read, which were quite surreal ... slamming doors of train on Euston Station, when ::trains had doors that could slam. This was witty. It was funny, it was pithy, and it was dark. It had a great twist at the end. [I was offered the] lead part in ::that. And that became Larceny, the ten-minute short that we shot in one weekend in Chris' flat. A Saturday and a Sunday.
According to the British Film Institute: "A man with a bag over his head is being beaten up by a gangster but pleads mistaken identity. It turns out that he is the room-mate of the man they're looking for, who is at that moment boarding a plane out of the country." Despite being an archive, this isn't a particularly reputable source given other small mistakes (including the runtime). Take this with a grain of salt.
IMDb lists the synopsis as "A man who likes to pick-pocket people, gets chased through the woods by the people he's trying to steal from" but the origin of this is unknown (considering IMDb can be edited by anyone, this is likely inaccurate).
Film Credits
Starring: The Man - Jeremy Theobald, Toby - Mark Deighton, Wooly Hat - Dave Savva
Production Assistant: Emma Thomas
Sound: David Lloyd
Assistant Director: Nigel Karikari
Music: David Julyan
Assistant Camera: Ivan Cornell
Written, Directed, Shot and Edited: Christopher Nolan
Produced: Christopher Nolan, Ivan Cornell
Thanks: Mike Dunderdale, Steve Street, Bloomsbury TV, UCL Film Society
Gallery
External Links
- [https://www.themoviedb.org/movie/456684-larceny/edit?active_nav_item=release_information&language=en-US TMDb page for Larceny (1996).
- IMDb page for Larceny (1996). ]
References
- ↑ Christopher Nolan on "Following" - Conversations Inside The Criterion Collection. Retrieved 21 Jul '21
- ↑ UCL Film Society page (archived). Retrieved 22 July '10
- ↑ Christopher Nolan: A Critical Study of the Films Retrieved 21 Jul '21
- ↑ British Film Institute page for Larceny. Retrieved 21 Jul '21