The Last Belle

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The Last Belle
Film poster
Directed byNeil Boyle
Written byNeil Boyle and Jim Maguire
Produced byNeil Boyle and Rebecca Neville
StarringAmanda Donohoe
Sienna Guillory
Colin McFarlane
Music byStuart Hancock and the Bratislava Symphony Orchestra
Release date
  • October 2011 (2011-10)
Running time
20 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The Last Belle is a 2011 20-minute animated short directed by Neil Boyle. It features the voices of Sienna Guillory, Amanda Donohoe, and Colin McFarlane.

Summary[edit]

The story is all about how Rosie found love in London. After exchanging e-mails with a mysterious beau in an online chatroom for weeks, she is excited to hear that he wants to meet her in person one evening. She has been told by him that he lives in a big house, is interested in the arts and fashion, and has had his friends tell him that he bears a strong resemblance to actor Brad Pitt.

The truth is that Wally—her online lover—is a drunkard and overweight, watches adult movies and has pin-ups plastered all over his apartment, and dresses in loud shirts and ties. He too is looking forward to his date with Rosie, but while waiting to leave, he has one too many cans of beer, resulting in him falling asleep past the time he had intended to leave by. It becomes a race against the clock as Wally is literally thrown out of his apartment and has to endure the London Underground system and other obstacles in order to reach his date, while Rosie worries over whether her date will arrive at all.

Cast[edit]

Wally has no speaking lines aside from a few grunts and gasping.

Production[edit]

The film took 15 years to make, was shot on 35mm film, and was the final cel animated movie to be ever screened. Notably, Roy Naisbitt, who worked on The Thief and the Cobbler, worked on the underground sequence for this movie.[1]

Release[edit]

The film was released in the UK in October 2011. In the USA it was released at the Brooklyn International Film Festival on 1 June 2012.[2]

Soundtrack[edit]

The original music score was composed by British composer Stuart Hancock, and the soundtrack EP derived from it was released by MovieScore Media in 2014.

References[edit]

External links[edit]