Inside Peaky Blinders film world premiere
PA MediaIn its 35-year history, Birmingham's Symphony Hall will surely have experienced few nights like this.
An explosion of Brummie pride on a night of epic cinema drama.
By order of the Peaky Blinders.
An evening to celebrate a Birmingham Knight and an actor from Cork, who will forever be Tommy Shelby.
Stephen Knight and Cillian Murphy took centre stage before the world premiere of Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man.
The ovations were strong and heartfelt, the mutual appreciation, well, blindingly obvious.
"You've got someone who is amazing," said Knight of Murphy.
"A writer at the top of his game," said Murphy of Knight.
PA MediaTwo hours later, another unprompted ovation. As the film credits rolled, sustained applause and cheers filled Symphony Hall.
"Netflix tell me something like two billion people are going to be watching this and the first thing they see is Birmingham in the caption," said the Peaky Blinders writer and creator.
On a night of cheers, this prompted the biggest.
PA MediaMurphy, who delighted fans with a walkabout in Centenary Square on his arrival at Symphony Hall, paid tribute to the viewers who helped catapult Peaky Blinders into a worldwide hit.
"I just feel a load of gratitude, immense gratitude to the fans first and foremost for making the show what it was," he said.
"Because it was a little show on BBC Two on Sunday evenings and then gradually and incrementally it became this global phenomenon that was down to the fans.
"So I feel immense gratitude."
Paying tribute to Knight, Murphy added: "To have that level of writing for that length of time, you know, it's a once in a lifetime freak occurrence to meet a writer at the top of his game like that."
PA MediaFilm director Tom Harper said Peaky Blinders fans were "the engine that has driven us to this point".
And Netflix executive Anne Mensah said Peaky Blinders had become a "really global phenomenon from the genius hand of Steven Knight".
She said since 2013 it had had "an incredible impact on pop culture" and described The Immortal Man as "epic and totally unforgettable".
The film sees Oscar winner Murphy reprising his role as gang leader Tommy Shelby who is depicted returning to the city during World War Two.
It will be shown in selected cinemas from Friday for two weeks, and will then stream on Netflix from 20 March.
