Nick Love Explained

Birth Date:24 December 1969
Birth Place:London, England, UK
Birth Name:Nick Love
Occupation:Film director, writer
Years Active:1995–present

Nick Love (born 24 December 1969) is an English film director and writer. His credits include the films The Football Factory, The Business, Goodbye Charlie Bright, Outlaw, The Sweeney and a 2009 remake of football hooliganism drama The Firm.

His parents divorced when he was five years of age, and he was brought up on a large council estate in South London.[1]

Career

Love attended the Bournemouth Film School at the age of 24.[2]

In 2001, Nick Love made Goodbye Charlie Bright, focusing on working class life on council estates.[3]

Love wrote and directed The Football Factory in 2004. The film was based on a book by John King.[4]

In 2005, Love directed the film The Business, which reflects the 1980s Costa Del Crime era. It was all taken from what he had read and heard from others about that particular time.[5] In 2007, Love produced the vigilante movie Outlaw.[6]

In 2009, Love directed The Firm.[7] The film focused on male friendship, football hooliganism and the football casual movement.

On 1 August 2012, Love's film The Sweeney made its world premiere at the opening of the Locarno International Film Festival in Switzerland. The film is based on the British television police drama of the same name. Love said that he had interest in making the movie for several years, but had difficult negotiations with studio executives, who wanted him to make the film with an Americanised style.[8]

Speaking at the UK premiere of The Sweeney in London, Alan Ford, who played Harry, explained that Nick Love "works very fast" and "does not mess about" as a director.[9]

In 2015, Love directed American Hero, an American-British superhero comedy.[10]

In August 2021, it was announced that Love would direct a new crime based series, which he has written, called A Town Called Malice. Love has said: "I'm over excited and hugely grateful to Sky for supporting my vision once again – I have lived and breathed Malice for the past few years, and for it finally to come to fruition, is a dream come true".[11]

Love was a follower of the "casual" culture present in the 1980s, something which is present in many of his films.[2]

Personal life

Love was married to EastEnders actress Patsy Palmer from 1998 to 2000.[6]

Love is an avid Millwall fan, having followed the team from a young age. His hobbies include walking and clay pigeon shooting. He lives in Gloucestershire.

On 4 September 2021, Love wrote in The Times Luxx magazine that he had been struggling with long COVID-19 symptoms and had attended a clinic in Spain, which had successfully treated his condition.[12]

Filmography

Film

Year Title width=65Directorwidth=65WriterProducerNotes
1999The Escort
Love Story
2001Goodbye Charlie Bright
2004The Football Factory
2005The Business
2007Outlaw
2009The Firm
2012The Sweeney
2015American Hero

Producer only

Executive producer only

YearTitleDirectorNotes
2006Dirty Sanchez: The MovieJim Hickey
2007WΔZTom Shankland
2008FaintheartVito Rocco
BronsonNicolas Winding Refn
The ChildrenTom Shankland
2010MonstersGareth Edwards
2013All StarsBen Gregor
2014Tom Green
2016Kill CommandSteven Gomez

Television

Year Title DirectorWriterCreatorExecutive
producer
Notes
2018–2021Bulletproof
2023 A Town Called Malice

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The lost outlaw who made peace with his inner rebel .
  2. Web site: Love actually. Bournemouth Echo.
  3. News: Goodbye Charlie Bright. IMDb. 29 April 2022.
  4. News: Hall. Sandra. The Football Factory. The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 October 2004. 14 July 2012.
  5. Web site: We Love it. Bournemouth Echo.
  6. News: Pool. Hannah. Question Time: Nick Love. The Guardian. 1 March 2007. 26 February 2021.
  7. Web site: Patterson. John. John Patterson on Nick Love, director of The Firm. The Guardian. 11 September 2009. 13 August 2021.
  8. News: Nick Love to make The Sweeney film?. Belfast Telegraph. 29 January 2010. 14 July 2012.
  9. Web site: INTERVIEW: Alan Ford on Nick Love, comparing the film wit. YouTube.
  10. Web site: American Hero (2015) – IMDb. IMDb.
  11. Web site: Sky announces riotous, neon-soaked '80s crime thriller, A Town Called Malice, a Sky Original drama coming to Sky Max and Streaming service NOW in 2022.
  12. The Times Luxx Magazine, 4 September 2021, page 22https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/how-a-spa-visit-eased-one-mans-long-covid-symptoms-3vwx2qjlb