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Anglo-Czech Film Success For Suicide Comedy

Anglo-Czech black comedy Shut Up And Shoot MeWinning three awards at a French cinema festival with a debut feature has put a Manchester filmmaker well on the road to international success. The film premiered in Prague on 1st December 2005, and has received great reviews. It is now on release in Czech cinemas.

Meanwhile, Steen Agro’s Anglo-Czech collaboration, Shut Up and Shoot Me, scooped three of the four main awards at the Cherbourg Film Festival, winning best film from both the expert jury and the audience, as well as the best actor award.

The festival screened six independent films from Britain and Ireland, but following this success, Steen’s movie has been lined up to appear at the prestigious Karlovy Vary film festival in the Czech Republic.

It has also earned the black ‘suicide comedy’ - a sought-after review from industry bible Variety, and now Steen, from Didsbury, hopes the film will gain wider distribution further afield.

An avid film fan, at eight years, Steen saved for a year to buy an Argos camera to make his first film. Later, after twice failing to get in to film school, he embarked on a career in advertising.

Shut up and Shoot Me, co-produced with Storitel’s Paul Sherwood and David Rauch and Jeffery Brown of UFO Pictures, is his debut movie.

Filmed in the Czech Republic, the film combines English and foreign actors, and sees a suicidal English tourist, depressed by the sudden demise of his wife squashed underneath a statue, hire a Czech amateur hitman to kill him.

Steen, 41, said: "I wanted to make a very low budget film that I had more control over, where you can establish a style and put your own stamp on it.

"The Czechs have got a dark sense of humour, similar to us Brits. In fact someone once told me that if made by a Czech writer the film would be exactly the same - except nobody would die!"