Shane Meadows, top director of Brit-flick classics like ‘This Is England’, ‘Dead Man’s Shoes’ and ‘24/7’, has a new film that’s already winning awards and plaudits at far-flung film festivals. It stars the young actor discovered by Meadows for his last movie and is shot in North London in gritty black and white. It’s feature length and has long-time Meadows collaborator Paul Fraser on the writing credits … Oh, and it comes from agency Mother’s newest division Mother Vision and is entirely funded by Eurostar.
Product placement in movies isn’t the newest of inventions, as any Bond aficionado can testify, but the current craze for ‘branded content’ seems to have every client chomping at the bit for a slice of the infotainment. Recently we’ve had some superb shorts from Schwepps and The Sweet Shop and a smart piece for eBay, but with ‘Somers Town’ Mother Vision and Eurostar have opted to entirely eschew the conventional commercial stylings and length and opt instead for a movie that encapsulates the ethos of the brand.

The Reel were lucky enough to attend a screening of the film and were left extremely impressed. Far from being an overlong commercial, the movie felt like a genuine artistic endeavor, encapsulating the benefits and joys of journeys rather than having shiny train drivers in shiny trains. Indeed in the introduction to the film, Eurostar head of UK marketing Greg Nugent commented that the only way Meadows could be cajoled into helming it was on the guarantee that there would be no ‘thumbs-up’ shots of railway folk.

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