The Streets' Mike Skinner on his movie debut The Darker The Shadow, The Brighter The Light: 'It's been a nightmare - an obsession'

You're listening to The Streets, Mike Skinner instructed us again in 2001. Back then he was launching Original Pirate Material, the era-defining debut album that will develop into a cult basic and a best-seller, regardless of his lyrical assertion in any other case.

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Now, we are going to quickly be watching on the massive display screen, too, as Skinner releases his debut movie The Darker The Shadow, The Brighter The Light, billed as a "tripped out neo-noir" homicide thriller. The story follows the "seemingly mundane life" of a down-on-his-luck DJ and has been fully crafted by the musician, who wrote, directed, filmed, edited and created the rating for the venture, and can be its star.

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From a lyricist whose nuanced strains about life's mundanities turned the banal into the exhilarating - from video retailers and texting women to scrambled eggs and fried tomato (loads of) - it sounds promising. Of course, there may be an album, too - the primary full-length file from The Streets in additional than 10 years (None Of Us Are Getting Out Of This Life Alive, launched in 2020, was a mix-tape of collaborations).

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'I'm a DJ within the movie and that a part of the movie is true'

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"It's a musical but the songs are the voiceover," Skinner instructed Sky News on the premiere for the movie, held in London. But do not anticipate "jazz hands or dancing around on lampposts - that's the next film", he jokes. "It's a very simple story that started out almost like a film noir type thing, but then got carried away."

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Scenes had been shot in London venues resembling Visions and Hoxton Hall, in addition to Manchester's Warehouse Project and Club Liv. "All of the places in the film are nightclubs where I have been DJing, so I'm a DJ in the film and that part of the film is true. But I wasn't trying to be overly clever. I was just trying to make a film that would be easy and cheap."

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Skinner known as time on The Streets in 2011 earlier than saying a reunion tour in 2017. His different tasks, resembling The D.O.T, have been low-profile compared, and he has been DJing for years. "I think music is about the other people you're around, which is what makes it so intense when you're a teenager, right, because the music represents these emotional times that you're having. In a weird way, I actually think DJing is a bit like that, really. Because, you're forced to be in rooms with people listening to music very loud."

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So the premise for the movie sounds prefer it might be based mostly in fact, aside from, presumably, the murder-mystery half. "It's not autobiographical at all, apart from the people and the places, if that makes sense," he says. "There's elements of it that are really happening - when I'm DJing, that's just someone filming me when I'm DJing. But it's... I've just crafted a very silly story on to the top of what is very banal, and nocturnal."

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Concept much like A Grand Don't Come For Free

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The movie was deliberate "as being a bit like my second album", Skinner says. A Grand Don't Come For Free, the album that noticed his fame skyrocket, was an idea album telling the story of a man who loses Β£1,000, that includes hits together with Fit But You Know It, Dry Your Eyes, and Blinded By The Lights.

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"This is the same, really," he says. "It's kind of what I've been doing lately, but turned into a musical."

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The music has been prepared for years - "this project's seven years old, or 10 years, depending on how you define it... I've been sitting on the music".

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Bringing again The Streets, beginning with a reunion tour, has been "great", Skinner says. In truth, that is been the straightforward bit. The movie was more durable to get off the bottom. He was decided, financing the venture himself when he struggled to get backing.

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"Knowing that I'm working on this film and then working on this film has been a nightmare. It's been an obsession... I kind of did everything myself so it just didn't stop, really. The tunnel was very long, very dark, and there was no light - apart from a train, maybe."

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'I did not sleep for per week'

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Skinner is a perfectionist. "You have to be. But it was more... we did try to get funding. No one wanted to give us any money. That was 2019. I mean, established directors can't make films, you know, so I've not got a chance in hell, really. I kind of knew that. End of 2019 I just thought, I've just got to do this myself or it's not going to get done. And it's really hard."

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Now, with the movie about to launch, he admits he feels "completely overwhelmed", having struggled essentially the most with the ending touches within the days main as much as the premiere. "I've kind of gone from literally sitting in my pants, just tearing my hair out, to like three days later, having make-up put on me and talking to you."

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He provides: "It was completely bonkers. I didn't sleep literally for a week. I could have gone on, to be honest, I could have gone on for another six weeks. But, you know, you don't finish a work of art. You just abandon it."

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Skinner is touring The Darker The Shadow, The Brighter The Light with Q&A periods at Everyman cinemas, beginning in Plymouth on 19 September and ending in London on 6 October

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