Madness’s Dust Devil by Adam Smith
David Knight - 27th Apr 2009
Adam Smith, who was busy last year directing the BBC's acclaimed adaptation of Little Dorrit, makes a very welcome (and probably fleeting) return to music videos with a corker for Madness.
Adam Smith, who was busy last year directing the BBC's acclaimed adaptation of <em>Little Dorrit</em>, makes a very welcome (and probably fleeting) return to music videos with a corker for Madness. Adam chronicles the eventful night out, and painful decline, of the eponymous dust devil - convincingly played by Jaime Winston, with support (in more ways than one) from Alfie Allen, and a heavily-disguised cameo by Adam's regular collaborator Charlie Creed-Miles. Ah, those were the days when a night wasn't a night if you hadn't at some point been carousing with transvestites...
Adam chronicles the eventful night out, and painful decline, of the eponymous dust devil - convincingly played by Jaime Winston, with support (in more ways than one) from Alfie Allen, and a heavily-disguised cameo by Adam's regular collaborator Charlie Creed-Miles.
Adam Smith, who was busy last year directing the BBC's acclaimed adaptation of <em>Little Dorrit</em>, makes a very welcome (and probably fleeting) return to music videos with a corker for Madness. Adam chronicles the eventful night out, and painful decline, of the eponymous dust devil - convincingly played by Jaime Winston, with support (in more ways than one) from Alfie Allen, and a heavily-disguised cameo by Adam's regular collaborator Charlie Creed-Miles. Ah, those were the days when a night wasn't a night if you hadn't at some point been carousing with transvestites...
Ah, those were the days when a night wasn't a night if you hadn't at some point been carousing with transvestites...
Adam Smith, who was busy last year directing the BBC's acclaimed adaptation of <em>Little Dorrit</em>, makes a very welcome (and probably fleeting) return to music videos with a corker for Madness. Adam chronicles the eventful night out, and painful decline, of the eponymous dust devil - convincingly played by Jaime Winston, with support (in more ways than one) from Alfie Allen, and a heavily-disguised cameo by Adam's regular collaborator Charlie Creed-Miles. Ah, those were the days when a night wasn't a night if you hadn't at some point been carousing with transvestites...
David Knight - 27th Apr 2009