All Mipcom articles – Page 7
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Features
Blackout - Tomorrow Is Too Late
‘We see the power go out in homes, the transport is down, and no one can get back to their loved ones’
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Features
Osama Bin Laden: The Inside Story
‘What this series does is tell for the first time the whole story of who Bin Laden was, where he came from and how he was radicalised’
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Features
Forgotten War Stories
‘The Bosnian episode is particularly harrowing, stark and brutal to watch at times’
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Features
Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol
‘There is an international texture to the plot – including a back story set in Turkey and the Middle East’
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Features
Red Election
‘It fits the premium mainstream positioning that we aim for with all our scripted shows’
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Features
HIP (High Intellectual Potential)
‘Strong lead characters, good pace and sense of humour throughout’
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Features
Furia (Fury)
‘It’s an interesting show because, on the one hand it’s politically relevant, but on the other, it’s an exciting rollercoaster ride’
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Features
The Teacher
‘We’re always on the hunt for great British drama in what is a competitive and crowded market’
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Features
The Responder
‘It’s the kind of bold, edgy, colourful series that could play on a range of platforms, so we are considering our options’
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Features
Conviction: The Case of Stephen Lawrence
‘The drama will sell because it is a powerful story’
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Features
Hollington Drive
‘The complexity of modern families and the lengths we go to in order to protect the people we love is something that we can all relate to’
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Features
The Cleaner
‘The cast is a dream and each episode has something new and distinctive to offer’
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Features
Mipcom Hot Picks: UK scripted
‘Crime has two things in abundance that help it’s global appeal: strong IP and talent’
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News
Fremantle drops out of Mipcom
British distributors with combined revenues of £1.8bn to miss sales event
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News
ITVS pulls out of Mipcom
Travel uncertainty means distributor will focus on its own events this autumn
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News
Reed Midem names Mip director for 2021
Lucy Smith to take charge of this year’s markets following Laurine Garaude’s departure
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Comment
Giving Sherlock a Russian makeover
We’ve reimagined the quintessentially British detective for a Russian audience but his beloved core attributes remain untouched, says Nurbek Egen