Hilary Rose
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Click link below left for full picture gallery of Matthew Cook's Atonement sketches.
FOR professional war artist Matthew Cook, being asked to do sketches on the set of Atonement was, to say the least, a novel experience. It came about after someone who worked for the film company went to an exhibition of work he had done in Iraq for The Times.
"She asked if I fancied going along to the set and doing some drawings. It was trial and error for both of us - I'd never drawn on set before and they weren't sure what they wanted the drawings for. But it was fascinating."
For three days, Cook worked from 6am until 9 or 10 at night, wandering round the set of the evacuation of Dunkerque, which was being filmed at Redcar in Northumberland. Meticulous about detail, the film producers dressed him in uniform and blacked-out the gold lettering on his sketch book to make it look less modern, so if he happened to be in shot it wouldn't matter.
"They asked if I wanted to actually be in the film, as it was a nice idea to have someone sitting sketching the chaos," Cook remembers, "but it would have meant I'd be static and I'm happier moving around."
He spent his days doing line sketches and taking photographs, adding the colour that night or in the months that followed. Having worked as an extra on Band of Brothers, he was familiar with the world of film-sets, but Atonement was in another league.
"When you stepped on to the beach, your jaw dropped: it was vast. And there were similarities to real wars: when I turned up on the first day, the beach was strewn with all this equipment - bicycles, abandoned uniforms. It was before the 1,000 or so extras turned up. There was just so much atmosphere. It felt like something big, something epic."
To buy Matthew Cook's work visit matthewcookillustrator.com
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I think Redcar might be in Sussex, now. I remember when I was growing up that it was even in Cornwall, for a while.
Wayne, Bordon,
Since when was Redcar in Northumberland?
Colin, Redcar, UK
Have you checked the date on this posted article? It says 'September 5, 2008' while today is March 8, 2008.
T. J. Cassidy, Arlington, Virginia, U.S.A.
It is the time for romances (since Jane Eyre 2006 (the best movie ever made) made such a splash). Love Toby Stephens the best actor ever. I hate when they see something good and they will make endless (makes you vomit) "copies" of it. Yes seen thousands of WWII movies, and usually when young men went to war, they had somebody waiting for them. Anyway when you young, you young doesn't matter what the circumstances are (where you are). There is nothing special about the Atonement. One more world war II movie. Sorry since the war ended there were endless numbers of such a movies. There was actually this one very good movie: "meet me at 6 pm after the war"(or someting like this).
franek, phoenix,
I recognised the sketch immediately. It comes from "War Boy" a book about the Second World War and a lad's experiences in the war up in Yorkshire or somewhere like that. I used to teach the Home Front and had my kids been older than 7 & 8 I would have read it to them.
I was going to read "Going Solo" by Roald Dhal, but then The National Curriculum came in withLiteracy Hour and all was lost!
I did have a useful bank of books and authors to draw on, though: Sylvia Plath's The It Doesn't Matter Suit springs to mind. Good writing is good writing. Poetry was easy as well. Plays were the real bind and Oxford Reading Tree attempted to rescue those in the early days.
Our school was a good one with a real literary heritage: pity about the management!
Carlyle, Croydon, U.K
Redcar is indeed north of the humber but it's county was North Yorkshire.
Neil , billingham,
Redcar is on Teeside and is nowhere near Northumberland!
Kat, Newcastle,
My son was one of the naval officers in Matthew Cook's excellent ambulance sketch. Is it available to purchase?
Ian Bowley, Consett, County Durham