Hero Fiennes Tiffin is an English actor best known for his roles in films such as Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, The Burnt Orange Heresy, and After. Born in London in 1997, he is the son of actor George Tiffin and director Dame Julia Fiennes. He attended King’s College School, Wimbledon before pursuing his acting career.
After Ever Happy (2022)
Fiennes Tiffin made his film debut in 2008 with a small role in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Following this performance, he went on to star in films such as The Riot Club (2014), Love Rosie (2014),and The Divergent Series: Allegiant (2016). In 2020, he reprised his role as Hardin Scott in the sequel to After: After We Collided. He also starred alongside Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell in Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled that same year, receiving praise for his performance from critics.
In addition to his film work, Fiennes Tiffin has had...
After Ever Happy (2022)
Fiennes Tiffin made his film debut in 2008 with a small role in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Following this performance, he went on to star in films such as The Riot Club (2014), Love Rosie (2014),and The Divergent Series: Allegiant (2016). In 2020, he reprised his role as Hardin Scott in the sequel to After: After We Collided. He also starred alongside Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell in Sofia Coppola’s The Beguiled that same year, receiving praise for his performance from critics.
In addition to his film work, Fiennes Tiffin has had...
- 2/22/2023
- by Gill Ander
- Martin Cid Magazine - Movies
Get ready to meet Hollywood’s new heartthrob.
21-year-old British actor/model Hero Fiennes Tiffin is starring in After as Hardin Scott, a mysterious and sulking senior who catches the attention of innocent freshman Tessa Young, played by Josephine Langford. And his performance is bound to get some hearts beating when the movie opens in theaters on Friday.
Though some fans might recognize the movie due to its connection with One Direction and Harry Styles — the story was originally written as fan-fiction with Styles as the main character then later evolved into Hardin — After takes Hardin in a different direction...
21-year-old British actor/model Hero Fiennes Tiffin is starring in After as Hardin Scott, a mysterious and sulking senior who catches the attention of innocent freshman Tessa Young, played by Josephine Langford. And his performance is bound to get some hearts beating when the movie opens in theaters on Friday.
Though some fans might recognize the movie due to its connection with One Direction and Harry Styles — the story was originally written as fan-fiction with Styles as the main character then later evolved into Hardin — After takes Hardin in a different direction...
- 4/11/2019
- by Ale Russian
- PEOPLE.com
Film-maker Martha Fiennes's new work, Nativity, has a soundtrack composed by her brother Magnus. They talk about their bohemian upbringing as two of six siblings and the unusual creative bond they share
'I actually think Magnus is a genius," says Martha Fiennes, of her younger brother. "I really do, I've said it to other people and they've said 'Yeah, I think he is'. I'm chucking stuff out barely finished, but Magnus is picking up on it; I think he tunes into a frequency. What Magnus has done is so completely brilliant. Handel wrote The Messiah in 12 days, I understand, and Magnus has done exactly the same."
She is talking about the soundtrack that Magnus has created for her first digital installation, Nativity, on display for the Christmas season in a specially constructed chalet in Covent Garden piazza, in London. In fact, Handel is thought to have spent 24 days on his oratorio,...
'I actually think Magnus is a genius," says Martha Fiennes, of her younger brother. "I really do, I've said it to other people and they've said 'Yeah, I think he is'. I'm chucking stuff out barely finished, but Magnus is picking up on it; I think he tunes into a frequency. What Magnus has done is so completely brilliant. Handel wrote The Messiah in 12 days, I understand, and Magnus has done exactly the same."
She is talking about the soundtrack that Magnus has created for her first digital installation, Nativity, on display for the Christmas season in a specially constructed chalet in Covent Garden piazza, in London. In fact, Handel is thought to have spent 24 days on his oratorio,...
- 12/3/2011
- by Susanna Rustin
- The Guardian - Film News
The filmmaker sister of actors Ralph and Joseph Fiennes is engaged to marry.
Martha Fiennes is to exchange vows again, just 10 months after the breakdown of her relationship to fellow director George Tiffin, the father of her three kids.
The Brit is planning a New Year wedding with her new partner, Syrian-born hedge fund tycoon Issam Kabbani.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "It'll be in the New Year and because Issam is based a lot in Switzerland we're hoping to have ceremonies in London and Geneva."...
Martha Fiennes is to exchange vows again, just 10 months after the breakdown of her relationship to fellow director George Tiffin, the father of her three kids.
The Brit is planning a New Year wedding with her new partner, Syrian-born hedge fund tycoon Issam Kabbani.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "It'll be in the New Year and because Issam is based a lot in Switzerland we're hoping to have ceremonies in London and Geneva."...
- 11/22/2011
- WENN
Filmmaker Martha Fiennes has split from her longterm partner, cinematographer George Tiffin, after over 20 years together. The Onegin director, who is the sister of actors Ralph and Joseph Fiennes, has three children with Tiffin - including son, Hero, who starred in "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince", and daughter, Mercy, who starred alongside Keira Knightley in "The Duchess".
Last year, Fiennes admitted she "would love to get married", but Tiffin was strongly against the idea. Now the pair has split - and Fiennes is already dating again.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "Very simply, we have mutually parted ways. Yes, I am with someone else - a Swiss-Arab businessman."...
Last year, Fiennes admitted she "would love to get married", but Tiffin was strongly against the idea. Now the pair has split - and Fiennes is already dating again.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "Very simply, we have mutually parted ways. Yes, I am with someone else - a Swiss-Arab businessman."...
- 1/7/2011
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Filmmaker Martha Fiennes has split from her longterm partner, cinematographer George Tiffin, after over 20 years together.
The Onegin director, who is the sister of actors Ralph and Joseph Fiennes, has three children with Tiffin - including son, Hero, who starred in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, and daughter, Mercy, who starred alongside Keira Knightley in The Duchess.
Last year, Fiennes admitted she "would love to get married", but Tiffin was strongly against the idea.
Now the pair has split - and Fiennes is already dating again.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "Very simply, we have mutually parted ways. Yes, I am with someone else - a Swiss-Arab businessman."...
The Onegin director, who is the sister of actors Ralph and Joseph Fiennes, has three children with Tiffin - including son, Hero, who starred in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, and daughter, Mercy, who starred alongside Keira Knightley in The Duchess.
Last year, Fiennes admitted she "would love to get married", but Tiffin was strongly against the idea.
Now the pair has split - and Fiennes is already dating again.
She tells Britain's Daily Mail, "Very simply, we have mutually parted ways. Yes, I am with someone else - a Swiss-Arab businessman."...
- 1/7/2011
- WENN
Jim Caviezel is joining Samuel L. Jackson in Martha Fiennes’ upcoming thriller “Blown.”
According to the Hollywood Reporter, Caviezel plays Will Matlock, an MI5 agent whose latest investigation leads him to an imminent terrorist attack.
Jackson will play Julian Lezard, a businessman who engages him in a high-stakes game of wits and deception.
Fiennes is directing a script by her husband, George Tiffin.
Caviezel, who is known for his role as Jesus in “The Passion of Christ,” recently starred in “Deja Vu.”
Jackson is currently onscreen in “Soul Men.” He will next be seen as The Octopus in “The Spirit.”...
According to the Hollywood Reporter, Caviezel plays Will Matlock, an MI5 agent whose latest investigation leads him to an imminent terrorist attack.
Jackson will play Julian Lezard, a businessman who engages him in a high-stakes game of wits and deception.
Fiennes is directing a script by her husband, George Tiffin.
Caviezel, who is known for his role as Jesus in “The Passion of Christ,” recently starred in “Deja Vu.”
Jackson is currently onscreen in “Soul Men.” He will next be seen as The Octopus in “The Spirit.”...
- 11/12/2008
- by Franck Tabouring
- screeninglog.com
Jim Caviezel and Samuel L. Jackson will face off against one another in the espionage thriller Blown. The film centers on Will Matlock (Caviezel), a top MI5 operative whose routine investigation of a global corporation leads him to discover an imminent terrorist attack. Jackson will play Julian Lezard, the businessman who engages him in a high-stakes game of wits and deception. Martha Fiennes is directing the flick from a screenplay by her husband, George Tiffin. Tiffin will also handle cinematography. U.K.-based Intandem Films is producing Blown, which is in preproduction and eyeing a 2009 release. Shani Hinton, Gareth Wiley (Vicky Cristina Barcelona), Fiennes and Tiffin are producing.
- 11/12/2008
- by James Cook
- TheMovingPicture.net
Jim Caviezel is matching wits with Samuel L. Jackson in Blown, an espionage thriller from director Martha Fiennes. Hmm, so it's the former Jesus Christ against the former Jedi Master Mace Windu - it's a battle of the religious icons!This time, however, Caviezel plays a crack MI5 operative who discovers evidence of an imminent terrorist attack on London while engaged in a routine investigation of a global corporation. Jackson will play businessman Julian Lezard, who engages the spy in a "high-stakes game of wit and deception". Well, with a name like "Lezard" he was never going to be a good guy, was he?*Fiennes, who last directed Chromophobia, is in the director's chair and also producing, while her husband George Tiffin wrote the script. This puts her other planned project, Mata Hari, presumably on the back burner until this one is complete.*Apologies to any doctors / missionaries / charity workers...
- 11/12/2008
- EmpireOnline
Jim Caviezel and Samuel L Jackson have snagged the leads in Martha Fiennes’ Blown. The plot, according to The Hollywood Reporter, finds Caviezel’s ace MI5 officer who uncovers an imminent terrorist attack while investigating a corporation. Seems the company’s top man – Jackson as Julian Lezard is behind a plot to destroy London, and Caviezel will have to match wits with him to stop it. Keeping it in the family The film will be a family affair for Fiennes – her husband George Tiffin wrote the screenplay and... .
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- 11/12/2008
- by jwhite
- TotalFilm
Jim Caviezel will attempt to stop Samuel L. Jackson from destroying London in the espionage thriller "Blown."
Martha Fiennes' film centers on Will Matlock (Caviezel), a top MI5 operative whose routine investigation of a global corporation leads him to discover an imminent terrorist attack. Jackson will play Julian Lezard, the businessman who engages him in a high-stakes game of wits and deception.
Caviezel ("The Passion of the Christ") is repped by Icm.
U.K.-based Intandem Films is producing and handling Afm presales on "Blown," which is in preproduction. Shani Hinton, Gareth Wiley, Fiennes and Tiffin are producing. Fiennes' husband George Tiffin wrote the sctipt and will handle cinematography.
Martha Fiennes' film centers on Will Matlock (Caviezel), a top MI5 operative whose routine investigation of a global corporation leads him to discover an imminent terrorist attack. Jackson will play Julian Lezard, the businessman who engages him in a high-stakes game of wits and deception.
Caviezel ("The Passion of the Christ") is repped by Icm.
U.K.-based Intandem Films is producing and handling Afm presales on "Blown," which is in preproduction. Shani Hinton, Gareth Wiley, Fiennes and Tiffin are producing. Fiennes' husband George Tiffin wrote the sctipt and will handle cinematography.
- 11/12/2008
- by By Gregg Goldstein
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
CANNES -- With the precision of a sharp, cold surgical knife, Martha Fiennes dissects her characters in Chromophobia. Save for one sentimental subplot, the writer-director clearly doesn't care for these people very much. Nor is there much reason for viewers to care, either. The strangely chilly melodrama-cum-satire made an odd choice for the closing night film at the Festival de Cannes. Its strong cast probably ensures North American distributor interest, but this misanthropic take on neurotics in the British professional class will certainly challenge marketers.
The married couple around whom subplots swirl is fast-rising attorney Marcus Aylesbury (Damian Lewis), the son of a distinguished judge (Ian Holm), and his anxious wife Iona (Kristen Scott Thomas). Having been made a partner in a powerful London law firm, Marcus finds himself drawn into an illegal scheme by his boss. Meanwhile, Iona, who suffers from low self-esteem and sexual frustration, deals with her dissatisfactions through a shrink and shopping sprees for clothes and modern art. Her new worry is that their hyperactive, small son might be spending too much time with his gay godfather, Stephen (Ralph Fiennes).
Marcus runs into an old mate from his youthful days in a rock band, Trent Masters (Ben Chaplin), who is now a tabloid journalist. When Marcus drunkenly confides in Trent about his firm's corrupt dealings, Trent can't help investigate a story that could make him a media star.
Meanwhile, in a maudlin and seemingly unrelated story that only connects -- and unconvincingly so -- to the main one later in the movie, ex-cop-turned-social worker Colin (Rhys Ifans) becomes emotionally involved the lives of his only seeming case, that of a seriously ill prostitute (Penelope Cruz) and her beloved small daughter.
Much of what you need to know about the characters -- or, to be precise, about how Fiennes feels about them -- can be gleaned from the production design. Fiennes and her designer Tony Burrough give the married bourgeois couple a sleek, severely modern and ultimately soulless house. At times, when the camera glides down sterile hallways or peers at characters through walls of glass, you can almost feel the director mock her characters.
The judge and his wife occupy a country manor stuffed with the furnishings of satisfied privilege, while Stephen's townhouse brims with lovingly collected art fastidiously displayed. Only the character who inhabits scruffy digs, meaning the prostitute, does the director's attitude soften. Soften, unfortunately, to the point of sentimental mush.
The acting is crisp, but no one's plight in this turgid soap opera gets through to you. Having dissed her characters for more than half the movie, Fiennes cannot turn things around and ask an audience suddenly to sympathize with their predicaments.
Tech credits are certainly pro but insulate the film's characters behind the well-upholstered trappings of wealth and privilege. And what on earth does it mean for the credits to insist that the film's cinematographer, George Tiffin, provided "additional screenplay material?"
CHROMOPHOBIA
Tarak Ben Ammar presents a Rotholz Pictures production
Credits:
Screenwriter-director: Martha Fiennes
Additional screenplay material: George Tiffin
Producer: Tarak Ben Ammar, Ron Rotholz
Executive producers: Robert Bevan, Steve Christian, Charlie Savill, Marc Samuelson, Peter Samuelson
Director of photography: George Tiffin
Production designer: Tony Burrough
Music: Magnus Fiennes
Costumes: Michele Clapton
Editor: Tracy Granger
Cast:
Trent: Ben Chaplin
Gloria: Penelope Cruz
Marcus: Damian Lewis
Iona: Kristin Scott Thomas
Colin: Rhys Ifans
Edward: Ian Holm
Penelope: Harriet Walter
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 135 minutes...
The married couple around whom subplots swirl is fast-rising attorney Marcus Aylesbury (Damian Lewis), the son of a distinguished judge (Ian Holm), and his anxious wife Iona (Kristen Scott Thomas). Having been made a partner in a powerful London law firm, Marcus finds himself drawn into an illegal scheme by his boss. Meanwhile, Iona, who suffers from low self-esteem and sexual frustration, deals with her dissatisfactions through a shrink and shopping sprees for clothes and modern art. Her new worry is that their hyperactive, small son might be spending too much time with his gay godfather, Stephen (Ralph Fiennes).
Marcus runs into an old mate from his youthful days in a rock band, Trent Masters (Ben Chaplin), who is now a tabloid journalist. When Marcus drunkenly confides in Trent about his firm's corrupt dealings, Trent can't help investigate a story that could make him a media star.
Meanwhile, in a maudlin and seemingly unrelated story that only connects -- and unconvincingly so -- to the main one later in the movie, ex-cop-turned-social worker Colin (Rhys Ifans) becomes emotionally involved the lives of his only seeming case, that of a seriously ill prostitute (Penelope Cruz) and her beloved small daughter.
Much of what you need to know about the characters -- or, to be precise, about how Fiennes feels about them -- can be gleaned from the production design. Fiennes and her designer Tony Burrough give the married bourgeois couple a sleek, severely modern and ultimately soulless house. At times, when the camera glides down sterile hallways or peers at characters through walls of glass, you can almost feel the director mock her characters.
The judge and his wife occupy a country manor stuffed with the furnishings of satisfied privilege, while Stephen's townhouse brims with lovingly collected art fastidiously displayed. Only the character who inhabits scruffy digs, meaning the prostitute, does the director's attitude soften. Soften, unfortunately, to the point of sentimental mush.
The acting is crisp, but no one's plight in this turgid soap opera gets through to you. Having dissed her characters for more than half the movie, Fiennes cannot turn things around and ask an audience suddenly to sympathize with their predicaments.
Tech credits are certainly pro but insulate the film's characters behind the well-upholstered trappings of wealth and privilege. And what on earth does it mean for the credits to insist that the film's cinematographer, George Tiffin, provided "additional screenplay material?"
CHROMOPHOBIA
Tarak Ben Ammar presents a Rotholz Pictures production
Credits:
Screenwriter-director: Martha Fiennes
Additional screenplay material: George Tiffin
Producer: Tarak Ben Ammar, Ron Rotholz
Executive producers: Robert Bevan, Steve Christian, Charlie Savill, Marc Samuelson, Peter Samuelson
Director of photography: George Tiffin
Production designer: Tony Burrough
Music: Magnus Fiennes
Costumes: Michele Clapton
Editor: Tracy Granger
Cast:
Trent: Ben Chaplin
Gloria: Penelope Cruz
Marcus: Damian Lewis
Iona: Kristin Scott Thomas
Colin: Rhys Ifans
Edward: Ian Holm
Penelope: Harriet Walter
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 135 minutes...
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