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andy-lambert's profile image

andy-lambert

Joined Nov 2007
Andy Lambert got started as a director with a commission from Channel 4 for a 50 minute cine-essay called "Live From Britain" about national identity during the Thatcher era. He later segued from documentaries into drama, writing and directing two short films: the first, "The Accidental Conspiracy" (for Film London) was a comedy-thriller set in the paranoid world of conspiracy theories; the second, "More is Less" (for BFI/C4), featured Eddie Marsan and focussed on a young couple gripped by ‘option paralysis’ on a Saturday night in London.

Andy then moved into the world of advertising and has been directing commercials for Honda, Nike, Fiat, Guinness, Nokia, E.On, Three, Coke, The National Lottery, Martini, DVLA and many others. He’s particularly known for cinematic-style ads that parody a genre or particular scene from the movies such as his well-known Revels spot, a spoof of the Russian Roulette scene from ‘The Deer Hunter’, which aired for over 10 years.

More recently, Andy created “The MUTE Series�, a series of (so far) 18 short films bound by the same rules: RULE 1 no dialogue RULE 2 no camera moves RULE 3 only one shot. “The MUTE Series� was awarded Best International Web Series at the Buenos Aires WebFest and also a Vimeo Staff Pick. It has been described by as:
“Hilariously deadpan� LAUGHING SQUID
“Ridiculously funny� SCRIPT MAGAZINE
“Funny, thoughtful, and surprisingly twisty… The MUTE Series represents the spirit of digital content.� TUBEFILTER
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andy-lambert's rating
Gholam
5.59
Gholam

Reviews1

andy-lambert's rating
Gholam

Gholam

5.5
9
  • Jun 10, 2017
  • Existential thriller set in the Iranian community in London

    This is the first feature-film by the acclaimed photographer Mitra Tabrizian. Set in the unfamiliar world of the Iranian community in London, it's a tense, slow-burn thriller featuring Cannes-award-winning actor Shahab Hosseini ('The Salesman', 'A Separation') as an ex-soldier sought out by two secretive Persians for a clandestine mission.

    Hosseini's character, Gholam, works at night as a cab driver and, without wishing to give too much away, the film shares a further intriguing connection with Scorsese's 'Taxi Driver' in the way that Gholam becomes more interested in getting involved in a complete stranger's plight, rather than taking up the cause of his fellow countrymen. In this way, the film deals with existential issues around what's worth living for, dying for and killing for, making it reach out to viewers way beyond its Iranian context.

    The mood of It brings to mind the cool, detached style of the films of Jean-Pierre Melville, such as 'Le Samurai'. Hosseini is a mesmerizing presence as always – he's one of those actors who can convey so much with just a look. It's beautifully photographed and it slowly grips you in a web of despair and atonement. It's an assured debut from Tabrizian who joins the growing ranks of artists making the move into cinema. It'll be fascinating to see where she goes from here.

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