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Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane on Cannes Breakout 'Urchin'
TV & Streaming

Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane on Cannes Breakout ‘Urchin’

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s hard these days to create an original film from scratch, tougher still to launch a first film in the Cannes Selection. Three actors have achieved that feat this year, all playing in Un Certain Regard, where the spotlight tends to be less harsh: Scarlett Johansson’s “Eleanor the Great,” starring American veteran June Squibb; Kristen Stewart’s “The Chronology of Water,” starring British actress Imogen Poots; and from the U.K., Harris Dickinson‘s “Urchin,” which could propel Frank Dillane (son of British actor Stephen Dillane) into acting awards contention. Two months after the festival’s end, rising distribution outfit 1-2 Special stepped in to buy Dickinson’s film for North America, which is in theaters now. 

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 27: Kelly Reichardt attends "The Mastermind" photo call during the 63rd New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center on September 27, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for FLC)

“The applause was lovely,” said Dickinson, sitting with Dillane on the roof of the J.W. Marriott Hotel with stunning views of the Gulf of Napoule. “We soaked it all in. We had all of our crew. We felt the love in the room. That’s a good feeling, to have given so much to somebody.”

Dickinson, who has yet to crack 30, has been a rising star ever since he broke out in Eliza Hittman’s New York indie “Beach Rats” in 2017, followed by Ruben Östlund’s “Triangle of Sadness,” which won the Palme d’Or en route to a Best Picture nomination. The actor has written and directed countless shorts, which gave financiers confidence to back his riveting portrait of a struggling London addict (Dillane) who is by turns charming, manipulative, desperate, angry, violent, loving, joyful, childlike, and needy.

Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane
Harris Dickinson and Frank DillaneAnne Thompson

It still took six years for “Urchin” to get to Cannes. Dickinson started writing the script after working in Walthamstow on an outreach project “that was focusing on furniture reissue with people that were unhoused,” he said. “It was a way for them to make money. And it was also a commune where they could have a safe haven. There were welfare checks, and people close to me struggled with cyclical behavior. I’ve always tried to be compassionate around that and tried to understand why and how people have ended up in certain positions.”

Dickinson auditioned many actors but offered the role to Dillane early on. “I’d seen him in ‘Fear of the Walking Dead’ years before,” said Dickinson. “I was intrigued about him as a performer. But then we didn’t cross paths, or we never met each other. The script for me was one thing. I knew that it needed an actor to come in and elevate it and change it and turn it upside down as well. Because there’s only so much a script takes you, right? And that’s what he did. He was doing tai chi and breathing exercises whilst he was doing the scene: ‘This is very strange, and it’s perfect for the character.’”

It took a couple of years to get made once Dillane was on board. “Frank attached before we had full finance, which is rare for an actor to do,” said Dickinson. “We were lucky that Frank believed in the project enough to just say, ‘Yeah, I’m game.’ And we already were prepping, even though we didn’t know we were going to make it.”

Frank Dillane in Harris Dickinson's Urchin
‘Urchin’BBC Films

As soon as he read the script, Dillane was eager to jump on board. “I remember I called you because I got the part,” Dillane said to Dickinson, “because I just wanted to say ‘yes’ straight away. I didn’t want there to be any lag, to go through the agents. You were in Berlin, so I was recording ‘Yes, I’ll do it.’ The script lent itself to almost anything. It was a real opportunity to carve out our own narrative, because it was ambiguous as to what the arc was, and it seemed like the arcs completed in each scene. It was almost like Mike had no throughline, and I found that exciting as an actor, to do each scene separate from the next one. He almost lived and breathed now. He was born again, and then he dies again, and then he goes there, and he’s born again. And I loved that about Harris’s script, because it was completely unconventional.”

In one heartbreaking scene, after seven months sober, Mike takes some ketamine with his girlfriend and her parents and is dancing and having a joyous time. He feels like he’s part of the family, everybody’s happy and good, and then he takes too much, and he can’t contain it. He doesn’t know where to stop.

Dillane had played an addict during “Fear the Walking Dead.” “When a character is on drugs at different times,” said Dillane, “I always tend to research the spiritual element of the drug. From researching ‘Fear the Walking Dead,’ the idea about heroin that got me was the idea that your cells are living and dying constantly, so you’re constantly dying and being reborn. That stuck with me a bit with this, the idea of physically continuing to be born and dying.”

The movie works because Dillane makes you care about this deeply flawed yet innocent character. “People that have gone to the brink of behavior,” said Dickinson, “the brink of morality, or brink of themselves, often are also joyous and naïve, because it helps them forget. It’s like an optimism that is in the moment for today.”

“He is innocent,” said Dillane. “That was the core of it. In order for us to be with him and to empathize with him, we have to just forgive him. And the reason we forgive him is he’s a child, he’s innocent, he’s an orphan. He’s not a bad person, just an open window. Harris kept distilling this thing of hope within me. We talked a lot about dignity in Harris. And that allowed the authenticity. So when he’s making a friend, this friend that he’s making is so important to him. When he relapses, it’s like family, ‘Finally, my people, oh, this is OK. Now, this is what we do. Everyone’s just cool.’ Some of us, we can’t do that. Unfortunately, Mike is one of those. It’s like an open window. Once you open it, you can’t close it again.”

Of course, Mike Leigh and “Naked” came to mind while prepping the film, but also “Career Girls” and “High Hopes,” said Dickinson, “there’s no misses with Mike Leigh. I love his use of humor. He’s so good at humanizing the mundane as well. It’s important, because there’s comedy in the simplicity of things sometimes, he does that so well.”

'Urchin'
‘Urchin’

Another reason why Dillane wanted to work with Dickinson was that he admired his short films. “This was a big reason I did it,” said Dillane. Dickinson had been shooting shorts, including a series of skateboard videos, since he was 10 or 11. “I made loads of short films,” he said. “And then I made a more professional short film with BBC that led to the theatrical film. It was quite a rudimentary short, but it was a way for us to try and prove a little bit.”

As production loomed, Dickinson lost one of his actors in a key role playing a friend of Mike’s and reluctantly took on the role himself. “We auditioned people,” said Dickinson. “We got some tapes in, but I got a bit protective over that role because this is a member of the community. This is someone who is struggling, a vulnerable individual. Frank had months and months of research and time spent with advisors to understand this world and these issues. I couldn’t just expect an actor to pop in a week before and get that kind of person, whereas I’d been doing that work.”

It may have been the right decision, but it wasn’t easy, said Dickinson. “It was hard to direct myself and also be in a scene with someone you’re directing, because I started to lose track of the background and what things were happening. And you get even more neurotic; acting is neurotic.”

The film deploys long lens cinematography to capture Dillane on crowded streets. “We always knew we wanted to enter into Mike’s world in a pragmatic and simplistic way, unromantic and not trying to do trickery around life on the streets,” said Dickinson. “We wanted to be observational and simplistic, and that was also to avoid any romanticism around it, but also just to ground it in that community. That was always important to us, and the story that we enter into as well. We believe it and we understand it, and we get a real sense of it. And then we allow ourselves to introduce surrealism, a slightly different language. We earned that.”

Next up: Dillane is back in London doing auditions. (His stock is going to rise considerably after “Urchin.”) And Dickinson is following up “Babygirl” and “Blitz” as John Lennon in Sam Mendes’ series of four Beatles films. Dickinson swears he’ll have time to do other things as well. “I wrote this script whilst I was working,” he said, “I didn’t take time out to write the script. I was always writing. I write when I’m on a plane. I’ll be able to write and direct still. I’ll have to finish the films first.”

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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'After The Hunt', 'Urchin’, ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’
TV & Streaming

‘After The Hunt’, ‘Urchin’, ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The awards seasons is heating up with high-profile limited releases in Luca Guadagnino’s After The Hunt, Harris Dickinson’s directorial debut Urchin, and Sundance and Berlin premiering comedy-drama If I Had Legs I’d Kick You. They join Kathryn Bigelow’s A House Of Dyamite on 200 screens and Jennifer Lopez-starring Kiss Of The Spider Woman movie musical in wide release. Documentary The Dating Game from China, a favorite on the festival circuit, is in LA. Neon doc Orwell: 2+2=5 by Raoul Peck expands to 51 theaters.

Amazon MGM Studios begins the rollout Guadagnino’s psychological thriller After The Hunt starring Julia Roberts at six locations in New York (Alamo Drafthouse Brooklyn, Angelika, Lincoln Square) and Los Angeles (AMC Burbank, The Grove, Century City), expanding next week. With Ayo Edebiri, Andrew Garfield, Michael Stuhlbarg and Chloë Sevigny, it premiered at the Venice (see Deadline review) and was the opening night selection at the New York Film Festival. Roberts is a college professor who finds herself at a personal and professional crossroads when a star student levels an accusation against one of her colleagues, and a dark secret from her own past threatens to come into the light. Written by Nora Garrett.

Cannes-premiering Urchin starring Frank Dillane opens in limited release in NY (IFC Center) and LA (AMC Burbank, Century City). At 96% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, Deadline review here. On the streets of London, Mike is hustling to get by. Roadside evangelizers won’t let him sleep in peace, his slippery friend won’t pay up the money he stole, and before long, he finds himself in trouble with the law. As he struggles to reintegrate into society, shuffling between gigs as a line cook and a trash collector, he must balance a newfound sense of community with his own itch for self-destruction. Distributed by 1-2 Special, the new label launched by Jason Hellerstein, a co-founding executive of Sideshow where he worked on acquisitions and marketing of Drive My Car, EO, All That Breathes, All We Imagine as Light and Flow. Expands regionally next week.

A24’s Sundance-premiering If I Had Legs I’d Kick You by Mary Bronstein toplined by Rose Byrne with Conan O’Brien opens on four screens in NY (Lincoln Square, Angelika) and LA (The Grove, Century City). Byrne has been heralded for her performance, winning the Silver Bear for Best Leading Performance at the Berlin International Film Festival. Byrne stars a woman with her life crashing down around her attempting to navigate her child’s mysterious illness, her absent husband, a missing person and an increasingly hostile relationship with her therapist (O’Brien). Certified Fresh at 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. See Deadline review.

Roadside Attractions is out with Jennifer Lopez-starring film adaptation of 1993 Tony-winning musical Kiss of the Spider Woman on 1,330 screens from. Premiered at Sundance, Deadline review here. Dreamgirls and Beauty and the Beast director Bill Condon returns to the movie musical. Valentín (Diego Luna), a political prisoner, shares a cell with Molina (Tonatiuh), a window dresser convicted of public indecency. The two form an unlikely bond as Molina recounts the plot of a Hollywood musical starring his favorite silver screen diva, Ingrid Luna (Lopez).

Netflix is giving Kathryn Bigelow’s nuclear thriller House Of Dyamite a 200 screen release including the Paris, Angelika and Alamo Drafthouse in NYC, and The Egyptian, iPic Westwood, Alamo Drafthouse, and Los Feliz in LA, ahead of its Oct. 24 streaming debut

Premiered at Venice, Deadline review here. The Oscar-winning director and producer of 2008 Best Picture-winner The Hurt Locker and 2012 Best Picture nominee Zero Dark Thirty is back with with her first feature since Detroit eight years ago. Written by Noah Oppenheim, former journalist and NBC News president. When a sole missile is launched at the United States, a race against time begins to determine who is responsible and how to respond as the clock ticks with less than 20 minutes before it hits its target. Stars Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson and Gabriel Basso.

The Dating Game, the Sundance documentary by Violet Du Feng that’s received a riotous welcome on the festival circuit, is set in China where eligible men vastly outnumber women. It follows Zhou, Li, and Wu, three bachelors embarking on a seven-day dating camp led by Hao, one of China’s most sought-after dating coaches, in a last-ditch effort to find love. From Fish + Bear Pictures, it starts a series of U.S. screenings with a weeklong run at Laemmle Glendale in LA.

Picturehouse opens Re-Election, written and directed by and starring Adam Saunders, in NYC at Regal Union Square. High school haunts everyone in one way or another. For Jimmy Bauer (Saunders), it was losing the race for class president senior year, 1995, which caused him to drop out. Now a 40-something underdog working in a memorabilia store owned by his dad (Tony Danza), Jimmy heads back to high school for his missing class credits and to finally win the election.

Doppelgänger Releasing, the genre label of Music Box Films, is out with Mr. K limited as of Oct. 8 in New York at the IFC Center, expanding after. Directed by Tallulah H. Schwab. Stars Crispin Glover as a down-on-his luck traveling musician stuck in a maze-like, remote hotel. Glover will appear at the IFC or Q&As this weekend and at the American Cinematheque Los Feliz 3 in LA October 21.

Yoav Potash documentary Among Neighbors from 8 Above opens at the Quad in NYC, expands to LA next week. One of the last living Holocaust survivors from the small Polish town of Gniewoszów, along with an aging eyewitness, break decades of silence about Jews who were murdered there six months after the Nazis were defeated. Their stories are brought to life with hand drawn animated sequences and touches of magical realism.

There Was, There Was Not from Suncatcher Productions and Watermelon Pictures, Emily Mkrtichian’s debut feature documentary, opens at the DCTV Firehouse in NYC for a weeklong run. Follows four Armenian women fighting the erasure and ethnic cleansing of their homeland of Artsakh. At LA’s Laemmle Glendale next week and rolling out with opening Q&A’s in all markets.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Frank Dillane Stars in Harris Dickinson's 'Urchin' - Official US Trailer
Hollywood

Frank Dillane Stars in Harris Dickinson’s ‘Urchin’ – Official US Trailer

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Frank Dillane Stars in Harris Dickinson’s ‘Urchin’ – Official US Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 10, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’re going to be just fine… The road is clear, each decision is yours.” 1-2 Special in the US has debuted their official trailer for the superb film titled Urchin, marking the directorial debut of famous British actor Harris Dickinson (best known from the films Triangle of Sadness, Scrapper, The Iron Claw, Babygirl, Blitz). This is his own film – he wrote and directed it. And it’s one of the best debuts of 2025. Urchin initially premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival a few months ago, and I wrote a nice review saying: “Not only is the direction confident and the vision for this story clear, it’s a damn good film featuring clever creative choices.” Mike, a rough sleeper (aka homeless man) in London, is trapped in a cycle of self-destruction as he attempts to turn his life around. Featuring an outstanding performance from Frank Dillane as Mike, also with Megan Northam (Meanwhile on Earth), Diane Axford, Murat Erkek, Moe Hashim, Shonagh Marie, & Karyna Khymchuk. This is a much better trailer than the other UK trailer, getting into more of the themes & character work from Dillane. I hope this film finds audiences worldwide – deserves to be a hit.

Here’s the official US trailer (+ poster) for Harris Dickinson’s film Urchin, from Picturehouse’s YouTube:

Urchin Film Trailer

Urchin Film Poster

You can rewatch the other UK trailer for Harris Dickinson’s Urchin film right here for even more footage.

Michael (starring Frank Dillane) barely scrapes by, surviving at the very edge of society in a world that is brutal and indifferent. After a tense incident lands him in prison, he tries to piece his life back together — entering rehab, looking for work, and attempting to reconnect with people. Urchin is written and directed by acclaimed British actor / writer / filmmaker Harris Dickinson, making his feature directorial debut after a few other short films previously. Produced by Archie Pearch & Scott O’Donnell. This first premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival earlier this year (read our review). Picturehouse debuts Dickinson’s Urchin in UK cinemas starting on October 3rd, 2025 this fall. 1-2 Special will also release the film in select US theaters starting on October 10th. This is a good one – worth watching when it opens. How does that look?

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September 11, 2025 0 comments
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First Official UK Trailer for 'Urchin' Film Directed by Harris Dickinson
Hollywood

First Official UK Trailer for ‘Urchin’ Film Directed by Harris Dickinson

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

First Official UK Trailer for ‘Urchin’ Film Directed by Harris Dickinson

by Alex Billington
August 26, 2025
Source: YouTube

“The road is clear. Each decision is yours…” Picturehouse in the UK has unveiled the first official trailer for the excellent indie film titled Urchin, which is the feature directorial debut of famous British actor Harris Dickinson (best known for starring in Triangle of Sadness, Scrapper, The Iron Claw, Babygirl, Blitz). This is his own film – he wrote and directed it. And it’s fantastic. Urchin initially premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival a few months ago, and I wrote a nice review saying: “Not only is the direction confident and the vision for this story clear, it’s a damn good film featuring clever creative choices. Delighted to report it’s one of the year’s best debuts.” Mike, a rough sleeper (aka homeless man) in London, is trapped in a cycle of self-destruction as he attempts to turn his life around. Featuring an outstanding performance from Frank Dillane as Mike, also with Megan Northam (from Meanwhile on Earth), Diane Axford, Murat Erkek, Moe Hashim, Shonagh Marie, & Karyna Khymchuk. This may not seem like it makes for a good story, but it definitely does, especially because this is such a cinematic presentation of Mike’s plight and troubles.

Here’s the official UK trailer (+ poster) for Harris Dickinson’s film Urchin, from Picturehouse’s YouTube:

Urchin Film Poster

Urchin Film Poster

Michael (starring Frank Dillane) barely scrapes by, surviving at the very edge of society in a world that is brutal and indifferent. After a tense incident lands him in prison, he tries to piece his life back together — entering rehab, looking for work, and attempting to reconnect with people. Urchin is written and directed by acclaimed British actor / writer / filmmaker Harris Dickinson, making his feature directorial debut after a few other short films previously. Produced by Archie Pearch & Scott O’Donnell. This first premiered at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival earlier this year (read our review). Picturehouse debuts Dickinson’s Urchin in UK cinemas starting on October 3rd, 2025 this fall. 1-2 Special will also release the film in select US theaters starting on October 10th. This is a good one – worth watching when it opens. How does that look?

Share

Find more posts in: Indies, To Watch, Trailer

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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