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Showing posts from January, 2026

Success Without Permission: Jagged Edge Productions and the New British Indie Playbook

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There are few things British independent cinema is less comfortable with than commercial success that arrives without permission. Success that doesn’t come via festivals, funding bodies, or critical consensus. Success that’s loud, messy, and difficult to categorise. That discomfort sits at the heart of the reaction to Jagged Edge Productions. For years, British indie filmmaking has tended to define its value externally, through awards, prestige, or institutional validation. When those structures wobbled during the pandemic, many productions stalled, waiting for the system to stabilise. Jagged Edge didn’t wait. Founded by Scott Jeffrey and Rhys Frake-Waterfield, the company emerged during that uncertainty with a simple, unapologetic focus: make films quickly, make them cheaply, and make sure people actually watch them. COVID didn’t so much hinder Jagged Edge as clarify its operating model. With traditional routes blocked or slowed to a crawl, the company leaned into speed, small crews...

British Indie Film, Interrupted: From Survival Mode to Something Like a Recovery

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  British independent film has spent much of the last fifteen years in a state of interruption.  Not collapse, exactly, more a long period of contraction, improvisation, and sheer stubborn persistence. Two major shocks define that period: the global financial crisis of 2008 and the COVID pandemic. Each hit the industry in different ways, but both forced it to rethink how films get made, financed, and finished. The 2008 financial crisis didn’t just reduce budgets; it rewired behaviour. Private investment dried up almost overnight, broadcasters became more cautious, and risk tolerance collapsed. For indie filmmakers, especially those working outside safe prestige drama, the gap between development and production widened dramatically. Projects could be written, packaged, even partially financed, but actually getting them made became harder to justify in a climate obsessed with certainty. What followed was a narrowing of ambition. British indie film didn’t stop, but it became saf...

Why British Indie Film Is Finding Its Feet Again

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Why Shogun Films Are Part of That Story If you’ve spent any time paying attention to British independent cinema over the last decade, you’ll know it’s often felt stuck. Not short of talent, not short of ideas, but oddly hesitant, pulled between funding-friendly realism on one side and ultra-microbudget passion projects on the other. What’s been missing is confidence. The belief that British films can be content to entertain on its own terms and still be worth making. That’s starting to change. Quietly, without much fanfare, a new wave of UK indie films has been finding its audience again, particularly in genre. Horror, action, thrillers. The kinds of films British cinema used to make with regularity, and export successfully, before we collectively decided they were somehow beneath us. One of the companies helping drive that shift is Shogun Films . Shogun isn’t trying to reinvent cinema, and that’s part of the appeal. Founded by Jonathan Sothcott and Jeanine Nerissa Sothcott,...