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Press Releases
³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Two drama event marks 10 Days To War – update on cast members
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Juliet Stevenson, Tom Conti, Stephen Rea, Patrick Malahide and Kate Ashfield have now been confirmed as part of a leading cast for ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Two's 10 Days To War.
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They join Kenneth Branagh, Harriet Walter, Art Malik and Toby Jones in an innovative series of short dramas to mark the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq – in the first collaboration of its kind between ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Vision and ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ News.
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In March 2003 war with Iraq was imminent, its justification and legality disputed. 10 Days To War tells the story of the countdown to the war and the lead up to military action.
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Part thriller, part political drama, each of the eight films will focus around the events that happened that very day five years ago.
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It is a unique undertaking made for the digital generation that will see the mini-films screened first in the Newsnight slot on ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Two from 10 to 19 March and then promoted on a variety of digital outlets including ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ iPlayer, bbc.co.uk/drama, the ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳'s YouTube channel and ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Four.
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The television event is a Think Big project, an initiative set up by Jana Bennett, Director, ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Vision, to create innovative multi-platform content.
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At times revelatory, at others exploratory, these ground-breaking 10 to 12-minute films will paint a portrait of the behind-the-scenes struggle to unite the contradictory politics and personalities of a highly controversial period of recent history.
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The films will tell the story of the hunt for weapons of mass destruction, saving the reputation of the United Nations, the battle with political conscience, the plans for reconstruction and the final countdown to war.
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The dramas come from renowned writer Ronan Bennett (The Hamburg Cell, Face) and are executive produced by Colin Barr (The Secretary Who Stole £4million, Maxwell).
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When the drama was announced last month, Roly Keating, Controller of ³ÉÈËÂÛ̳ Two, said: "This is a challenging and original way of exploring one of the most controversial moments in recent British history. By broadcasting daily we hope audiences will be able to recapture that exciting sense of huge events unfolding unpredictably in real time."
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Writer Ronan Bennett said: "We won't exploit retrospect or hindsight: each film will tell the story as it was known then to the people it most affected."
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And Peter Barron, Newsnight Editor, added: "The story our viewers have wanted us to revisit more than any other is the run up to the war in Iraq in 2003. This dramatisation gives us the opportunity to explore the issues and arguments in a way traditional documentary couldn't. We then plan to question the real players about the events of 2003 on Newsnight."
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In the first film Juliet Stevenson plays a senior civil servant considering her position as the legality of war comes to a head in the heart of the Blair government.
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Kenneth Branagh features in the last of the films as Colonel Tim Collins, of the Royal Irish Regiment, whose rousing speech to British soldiers hours before they entered into battle in Iraq made headlines around the world. The drama follows him as he prepares to cross the border into Iraq.
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In another film two Labour MPs battle with loyalty and personal conscience, not to mention the whip, in the crucial House of Commons vote on the war.
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Filming is now under way in London.
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