film | drama film | silent film | film director | Sundance Film Festival | short film | horror film | Film director | Documentary film | Cannes Film Festival | Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film | musical film | film adaptation | independent film | action film | Toronto International Film Festival | National Film Board of Canada | television film | film producer | Venice Film Festival | Titanic (1997 film) | British Film Institute | Tribeca Film Festival | Jurassic Park (film) | Gone with the Wind (film) | Film producer | British Academy of Film and Television Arts | 2004 in film | The Wizard of Oz (1939 film) | cult film |
After a successful career on the London stage, National Shakespeare Tours with Barrie Rutter's award winning Northern Broadsides Theatre Company, a turn as a CGI Gladiator on Ridley Scott's film of the same name and the phenomenal success,of the short film Don't Walk Channel Four/Film Four, Clark moved to New York City, married his 'American Woman' and founded the Digital production company thelostworkers...
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film four out of four stars and called it "terribly complicated, involved and fascinating - a revelation."
His feature film The Acid House, adapted by Irvine Welsh from his collection of short stories by the same name, was released in 1999 by Film Four International to critical acclaim.
He wrote the screenplay for the feature film Four Days, which starred Colm Meaney, Lolita Davidovich, and William Forsythe.
Filmmaker Wim Wenders picked the short film Four Years, Six Months that starred Wendell and actor Keir O'Donnell as one of his favorite short films on the website Filmaka.com.
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four stars out of four and compared Natalie Ravenna's quest to that of the Peter Fonda character in Easy Rider, and called them both "lineal descendants of the most typical American searcher of them all, Huckleberry Finn."
Peter Bradshaw, film critic for The Guardian, awarded the film four out of five stars, writing: "Warm and energetic, Shane Meadows's love letter to the Stone Roses may be his best film so far".