St George's Day
A match, a firm, a heist, and the mother of all battles.
Infamous London gangster cousins, Micky Mannock and Ray Collishaw, are at the top of the food chain, when their world is turned upside down as they lose a shipment of the Russian Mafia's cocaine in rough seas. Set in London, Amsterdam and Berlin, the story races across Europe at breakneck speed as Micky and Ray attempt to stay one step ahead of the Police. Can they pull off a daring diamond heist in time to put things right and retire to a "legitimate" way of life.
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Trailers & Videos

St. George's Day Full Trailer OUT on DVD 24 December 2012
Cast

Vincent Regan
Albert Hall

Charles Dance
Trenchard

Dexter Fletcher
Levi

Craig Fairbrass
Ray Collishaw

Sean Pertwee
Proctor

Keeley Hazell
Peckham Princess

Frank Harper
Mickey Mannock

Luke Treadaway
William Bishop

Nick Moran
Richard

Jamie Foreman
Nixon

Ashley Walters
Kootz

Neil Maskell
Jimmy McCudden

Zlatko Burić
Vladimir Sukhov

Clemency Burton-Hill
Amelia

Charles Venn
Lol

Velibor Topic
Albanian Thug

Ludger Pistor
Werner Voss

Hetti Bywater
Lol's Girlfriend

Tony Denham
Eddie Mannock

Angela Gots
Ellie Collishaw
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Reviews
John Chard
The Rumble Robbery.
St George's Day is directed by Frankie Harper, he also co-writes the screenplay with Urs Buehler and stars with Craig Fairbrass, Vincent Regan, Charles Dance, Dexter Fletcher, Nick Moran, Keeley Hazell, Jamie Foreman and Sean Pertwee. Music is by Tim Attack and cinematography is by Mike Southon.
Frankie Harper, one of the most liked and recognisable faces from the slew of British gangster and football hooligan films, turns his hand to try and make his own mark in what is becoming a bulging genre of Brit film. The kicker here is that he blends the two popular lad staples together by having a plot involving gangsters using a football rumble as cover for a robbery. In Berlin, Germany, no less and St George's Day as well! Cor blimey!
Plot is kind of incidental, which is just as well since it's not exactly a brains trust script. Film is filled out with the requisite amount of shouting, swearing, fighting, shooting, thieving, jingoism, sloganeering and lairy witticisms. Harper has surrounded himself with pals, clearly offering up reassuring presences to the budding director, while it's fun for fans of this splinter of Brit cinema to play spot the face. It's all very blokey and enjoyable enough for the undemanding, but the good idea on the page is not born out as the narrative often gasps for fresh air, the attempts at complexity ending up mundane.
The cinematography is a highlight, with the number of Euro locations used giving good visual tonics. Cast perform adequately as per the material, though Moran, Fletcher, Dance and Pertwee are under used and therefore wasted. There's enough in here to suggest Harper could offer something of value as a director, but maybe a little less crass for crass sake should be jettisoned in favour of some intelligence in the writing. Dexter Fletcher's debut outing as a director, Wild Bill, is a good marker, Frankie would do well to follow his mate's lead. 6/10
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