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St George's Day (film)

St George's Day is a 2012 British gangster film. It is directed by Frank Harper and stars Harper, Craig Fairbrass, Charles Dance, Vincent Regan, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran and Keeley Hazell.

St George's Day

Urs Buehler
Frank Harper

Nick Hamson
Warren Derosa

Mike Southon, BSC

Nick McCahearty

Tim Atack

Metrodome

  • 7 September 2012 (2012-09-07)

109 Minutes

United Kingdom

English

Plot[edit]

Infamous cousins Micky Mannock (Frank Harper) and Ray Collishaw (Craig Fairbrass) run London's top firm. But their supremacy in the capital's gangster underworld is threatened when they lose a drug shipment belonging to the Russian Mafia. The stakes could not be higher as they plan an audacious heist in Berlin. If successful, this could pay off their debts and set them up for life. Hiding out among an English super-firm gearing up for a massive showdown as the 3 Lions play Germany on St. George's Day, their gang have just one shot at the job. But with the cops and Russians on their trail, the last thing they need is a grass (snitch) in the ranks.

as Ray Collishaw

Craig Fairbrass

as Micky Mannock

Frank Harper

as Trenchard

Charles Dance

as Albert Ball

Vincent Regan

as Levi

Dexter Fletcher

as Richard

Nick Moran

as Peckham Princess

Keeley Hazell

as Nixon

Jamie Foreman

as Proctor

Sean Pertwee

as William Bishop

Luke Treadaway

as Kootz

Ashley Walters

Tony Denham as Eddie Mannock

as Jimmy McCudden

Neil Maskell

as Vladimir Sukhov

Zlatko Burić

as Amelia

Clemency Burton-Hill

as Lol

Charles Venn

Mark-John Ford as Louis

as Albanian Thug

Velibor Topić

Angela Gots as Ellie Collishaw

Susan Fordham as Undercover Police

as Werner Voss

Ludger Pistor

Joe Montana as Jack

as Lol's Girlfriend

Hetti Bywater

Ronnie Fox as Klash

Davinia Taylor as Sarah

Peter Vollebregt as Jan Van Dorn

Sura Dohnke as Hannah

Faye Tozer as Police Woman

Faruk Pruti as Russian 1

Robert Cambrinus as Anthony Forker

Hannah Blamires as Clubber

Michael Suluk as Tiny

Tommy McDonnell as Joe Collishaw

Craig Henderson as Dillan

Sarah Weatherstone as Zoe

Dominic Burke as Police Forensic Officer (as Dom Burke)

Julie Vollono as Ferry Passenger

Scott Bradley as German Hooligan

Timothy J. Murphy as Police Officer

Christian Weathersone as Ellie's son

Elodie Hill as Ellie's daughter

Russell Balogh as Dutch Hooligan (uncredited)

James Michael Rankin as German Thug (uncredited)

Deborah Rosan as Lol's Family – Funeral Scene (uncredited)

Chris Wilson as Restaurant Owner (uncredited)

[1]

Tommy Penfold as Barman

Dwain Stephens as Black Waiter

Louisa Martin as Graveside Choir member (uncredited)

Release and reception[edit]

The premiere of the film took place at the Odeon in Covent Garden, London on 29 August 2012. The premiere was attended by stars of the film, such as Frank Harper, Craig Fairbrass, Keeley Hazell and Tony Denham, and other actors, such as Bruce Payne. The general release of the film took place on 7 September 2012. The film has received mixed reviews. The film has a rating of four out of five on Time Out's London magazine website,[2] while The Daily Telegraph gave it a rating of two out of five[3] and The Independent gave it a rating of one out of five.[4] One reviewer stated that Harper just about pulls off the 'globe-hopping plot involving gangsters, drug deals, heists and more than a touch of double-crossing betrayal' and that whilst the film is 'sometimes predictable, it's never dull, with a fast-paced plot and a terrific cast'.[5] Phelim O'Neill, who reviewed the film for The Guardian, stated that 'it's a low-budget film with enough ambition to take the action overseas, and it's nicely shot'.[6] Joanna Ebuwa, who reviewed the film for Britflicks, stated that 'this is the best British gangster film since Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, it's thoroughly entertaining, funny, nostalgic and pokes fun at the police and the establishment. Harper has been studying from Guy Richie and is definitely one to watch'.[7] John Parrot, who reviewed the film for The Film Review stated that 'St George's Day is so excessive, rude and genuinely Cockney that it may become a cult movie'.[8] In contrast, Stephen Kelly of Total Film stated that 'not even the formidable presence of Charles Dance can salvage a script this woeful'.[9]

at IMDb

St George's Day

at Rotten Tomatoes

St George's Day