Movies Starring David Schofield
Total movies found: 16, viewing from 1 to 16
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Burke and Hare
[ 2010, UK ] starting from $1.99No Job Too Small. No Body Too Big. No Questions Asked.
Actors: Isla Fisher, Simon Pegg, Tim Curry, Christopher Lee, Andy Serkis, Hugh Bonneville, Tom Wilkinson, Stephen Merchant, Jenny Agutter, Jessica Hynes, Georgia King, Bill Bailey, Pollyanna McIntosh, David Schofield, Allan Corduner, David Hayman, Steve Speirs, Reece Shearsmith, Ronnie Corbett, John Woodvine, Michael Smiley, Robert Stone, Gino Picciano, Duncan Duff, Pete Noakes, Christian Brassington, Johnny Lynch, George Potts, Ciaron Kelly, Chris Mansfield, Ken Matthews, Nick Moorcroft, Guðmundur Auðunsson, Shelley Longworth, Christopher Obi, Paul Davis, Henry Monk, Patricia Gibson-Howell, Lee p Carroll, Spencer Noll, Amanda Claire-Jones, Michelle Brooks, Joseph Andrew Mclean, Nick Shaw, Mark Smith, Tom Urie
Directors: John Landis
Based on the true story about the famous murderers, 'Burke And Hare' follows the hapless exploits of these two men as they fall into the highly profitable business of providing cadavers for the medical fraternity in Nineteenth Century Edinburgh, then the centre of medical learning. The one thing they were short of was bodies. Written by Anonymous
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F
[ 2010, UK ] starting from $1.99Actors: David Schofield, Eliza Bennett, Ruth Gemmell, Juliet Aubrey, Emma Cleasby, Finlay Robertson, Roxanne McKee, Tom Mannion, Max Fowler, Mike Burnside, Christopher Adamson, Jamie Kenna, Tina Barnes, Alexander Ellis, Ian Cullen
Directors: Johannes Roberts
An alcoholic teacher has to save his estranged daughter when a group of hooded youths attack the school at night....I liked the idea behind this film, but sadly as written, it doesn't quite work. The characters are largely unappealing so you don't really care what happens to them. For an 18-rated film, there is a surprising lack of on-screen violence. You don't actually see much on-screen, instead usually only seeing the bodies afterwards. As a result, then the writer/director Johannes Roberts has to rely on his skill with a camera to create tension and any scares he can, and to be fair he does get the building tension as the film progresses just right. There are a couple of scares, but not many. The cast do their best to look scared or terrified, but as said, the script makes them mostly unappealing people so you have no feelings for them and don't care if they live or die. Another fault, for me anyway, was the apparent lack of motivation for the attack. Was it revenge for something? Did they attack out of boredom? Something to indicate why they were doing it might have helped I feel. But Johannes Roberts does managed to partially redeem the film with a truly unsettling ending. I can't recall a recent film with an ending like this, and it actually works brilliantly. Sadly though it is his writing that lets him down, which is a shame, as potentially this could have been very good indeed. A missed opportunity.
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The Wolfman
[ 2010, UK, USA ] starting from $1.99Actors: Simon Merrells, Gemma Whelan, Emily Blunt, Benicio Del Toro, Mario Marin-Borquez, Asa Butterfield, Cristina Contes, Anthony Hopkins, Art Malik, Malcolm Scates, Nicholas Day, Michael Cronin, David Sterne, David Schofield, Roger Frost, Rob Dixon, Clive Russell, Oliver Adams, Geraldine Chaplin, Emil Hostina, Rick Baker, Emily Cohen, Jessica Manley, Dave Fisher, Olga Fedori, Hugo Weaving, Lorraine Hilton, Antony Sher, John Owens, Barry McCormick, Jordan Michael Coulson, Ian Peck, Richard James, David Keyes, Shaun Smith, Jake Nightingale, C.C. Smiff, Anthony Debaeck, Branko Tomovic, Claude Starling, Debbie Attwell, Elizabeth Croft, Andy Gathergood, Sam Hazeldine, Bridgette Millar, Emily Parr, Dianne Pilkington, Robert Roman Ratajczak, Geoff Searle, Karim Theilgaard, Max von Sydow, Christian Wolf-La'Moy
Directors: Joe Johnston
Lawrence Talbot, a haunted nobleman, is lured back to his family estate after his brother vanishes. Reunited with his estranged father, Talbot sets out to find his brother... and discovers a horrifying destiny for himself. Talbot's childhood ended the night his mother died. After he left the sleepy Victorian hamlet of Blackmoor, he spent decades recovering and trying to forget. But when his brother's fiancée, Gwen Conliffe, tracks him down to help find her missing love, Talbot returns home to join the search. He learns that something with brute strength and insatiable bloodlust has been killing the villagers, and that a suspicious Scotland Yard inspector named Aberline has come to investigate.







