Danny Dyer and Stephanie Leonidas are terrific, sharing a believable lived-in chemistry that also makes the movie more affecting than you'd expect. It all culminates in a hilarious spin on Love ...
The outrageous new British comedy sees Dyer play Jack, an aging football hooligan who feels irrelevant in today's society. After he's arrested, Jack is given six weeks to turn his life around and keep ...
True Brit Entertainment is the newest member of The Industry Trust for IP Awareness. The announcement follows True Brit ...
Praising his co-star Stephanie Leonidas, who plays his character's better half in the film, Danny also revealed there is another co-star alongside him in Marching Powder who is very dear to his ...
Writer-director Nick Love’s film Marching Powder, about a very different brand of working-class Londoner, is no kind of treat. That is, unless you savour multiple use of the C-word ...
If you loved Dyer having it large(r) in 2004's The Football Factory, then Marching Powder will be right up your ...
Marching Powder has moments of genuine laugh-out-loud humour, but it often mistakes shock value for sharpness, leaving it somewhere between a guilty pleasure and a tired relic from the early 2000s ...
But Marching Powder isn’t just about anti-woke banter: it also has plenty of affection for its characters, even if it doesn’t fully flesh them out. It’s punchy but never lands a killer ...
Marching Powder, to stretch a comparison, is Danny Dyer’s The Godfather, Part III. How? Because of a much-quoted Al Pacino line: just when we thought he was out, they’ve pulled him back in. By “they”, ...
Jack (Danny Dyer) spends his weekends coked up and causing havoc outside football matches until an arrest leaves him with six weeks to clean up his act or be sent to prison. But with his disturbed ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results