Listed as "The One That Got Away" in Caitlin Kennedy's list of 5 Horror Films That Defined 2020 after its US release was delayed due to Covid-19, Rose Glass' Saint Maud is coming select theaters and drive-ins on January 29th, followed by a release on the streaming service Epix on February 12th.
The news was reported by Deadline and shared on A24's official Twitter page. You can check out the film's previously released trailer below, and in case you missed it, read Heather Wixson's Beyond Fest review and Emily von Seele's Fantastic Fest review.
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom.
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse,...
The news was reported by Deadline and shared on A24's official Twitter page. You can check out the film's previously released trailer below, and in case you missed it, read Heather Wixson's Beyond Fest review and Emily von Seele's Fantastic Fest review.
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom.
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse,...
- 1/13/2021
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
All hail Saint Maud as we prepare to rejoice in her ascension. A24‘s psycho-evangelical thriller will be the first horror movie shown in theaters since Covid-19 Stephen-King-novelized us all. And if that’s not scary enough, it’s being compared to Hereditary and The Witch as the next great modern horror film. The film will open nationwide on July 17.
Saint Maud is a “chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world,” according to its official website. “Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes obsessed with saving her dying patient’s soul — but sinister forces, and her own sinful past, threaten to put an end to her holy calling.” This is the first feature from writer/director Rose Glass, who brings a vibe similar to the claustrophobic horror classics Rosemary’s Baby (1968) and Repulsion (1965).
The film stars Morfydd Clark in the title role, a private...
Saint Maud is a “chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world,” according to its official website. “Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes obsessed with saving her dying patient’s soul — but sinister forces, and her own sinful past, threaten to put an end to her holy calling.” This is the first feature from writer/director Rose Glass, who brings a vibe similar to the claustrophobic horror classics Rosemary’s Baby (1968) and Repulsion (1965).
The film stars Morfydd Clark in the title role, a private...
- 6/17/2020
- by Alec Bojalad
- Den of Geek
In her 5-star Fantastic Fest review, Emily von Seele wrote that Saint Maud "...terrifies as much as it intrigues, and will keep audiences guessing up until the very last horrific second." While Saint Maud's April release was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the wait to see the film is nearly over, as it's now been rescheduled by for a July theatrical release.
A24 announced that Saint Maud will be released "in theaters nationwide July 17."
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom.
You can watch the previous trailers below, and in case you missed it, check out Emily's full review.
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes...
A24 announced that Saint Maud will be released "in theaters nationwide July 17."
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom.
You can watch the previous trailers below, and in case you missed it, check out Emily's full review.
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes...
- 6/16/2020
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
In her 5-star Fantastic Fest review, Emily von Seele wrote that Saint Maud "...terrifies as much as it intrigues, and will keep audiences guessing up until the very last horrific second," and thankfully we won't have to wait long to see the new religious horror film, as A24 has released the movie's official trailer ahead of its release this spring.
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom. A24 will release Saint Maud in theaters on March 27th, 2020:
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes obsessed with saving her dying patient’s soul — but sinister forces, and her own sinful past, threaten to put an end to her holy calling.
Written and directed by Rose Glass, Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark, Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom. A24 will release Saint Maud in theaters on March 27th, 2020:
"The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes obsessed with saving her dying patient’s soul — but sinister forces, and her own sinful past, threaten to put an end to her holy calling.
- 12/17/2019
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
"It takes nothing special to mop up after the dying... But to save a soul – that's quite something." A24 has unveiled the first official trailer for an indie horror film titled Saint Maud, which originally premiered at the Toronto Film Festival earlier this fall in the Midnight Madness category. It also played at Fantastic Fest, and stopped by the London Film Festival. This unconventional "religious horror" film follows a pious nurse who becomes dangerously obsessed with saving the soul of her dying patient. It received rave reviews out of Tiff, if this kind of horror is your thing. Saint Maud stars Morfydd Clark as the titular Maud, along with Jennifer Ehle, Lilly Frazer, Lily Knight, Marcus Hutton, Turlough Convery, and Rosie Sansom. This was one of the most talked about films at Tiff this year, and looks like a new take horror fans will dig. Here's the first official trailer...
- 12/17/2019
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
It's not long now before AFI Fest 2019 kicks off on November 14th, so details on the genre films set to be screened at the festival have been announced. Also in today's Horror Highlights: The Addams Family Halloween screenings, Gibson's Behind the Board interview with A Nightmare on Elm Street composer Charles Bernstein, a look at the short film Bienvenue, Cavitycolors' Halloween: H20 and Halloween: Resurrection apparel, and the poster for Black Wood.
Lineup Revealed for AFI Fest 2019: "AFI Fest 2019 presented by Audi, the American Film Institute’s annual celebration of cinema, will take place Thursday, November 14 – Thursday, November 21 in the heart of Hollywood.
Tickets can be purchased starting October 30 at https://fest.afi.com/tickets/
Bacurau – World Cinema
The inhabitants of a remote Brazilian village realize that their town has been erased from the map. When the water supply is cut, cell-phone coverage fades and a local family is murdered,...
Lineup Revealed for AFI Fest 2019: "AFI Fest 2019 presented by Audi, the American Film Institute’s annual celebration of cinema, will take place Thursday, November 14 – Thursday, November 21 in the heart of Hollywood.
Tickets can be purchased starting October 30 at https://fest.afi.com/tickets/
Bacurau – World Cinema
The inhabitants of a remote Brazilian village realize that their town has been erased from the map. When the water supply is cut, cell-phone coverage fades and a local family is murdered,...
- 10/31/2019
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Some must-watch stuff is coming this Sunday in a two-hour "Once Upon a Time" event, including Ruby, Mulan, Dr. Whale, Zelena's baby, Emma's impossible decision, and the culmination of the Camelot quest.
ABC just shared details on the two-part special, which airs November 15 from 8 to 10 p.m. Here's the rundown on the first hour, Season 5, Episode 8, "Birth," which includes the return of Dr. Whale/Victor Frankenstein:
Tensions in Camelot come to a head when Merlin, now under Arthur's control, delivers an ultimatum to Emma: hand over the Dark One dagger and the Promethean spark or he will kill her entire family. Refusing to give in, Emma and our heroes face off against Arthur, Merlin and Zelena in an epic battle of magic and will. Just when the end is in sight, Emma is forced to make a gut-wrenching choice that no one saw coming.
Back in Storybrooke, Zelena's pregnancy...
ABC just shared details on the two-part special, which airs November 15 from 8 to 10 p.m. Here's the rundown on the first hour, Season 5, Episode 8, "Birth," which includes the return of Dr. Whale/Victor Frankenstein:
Tensions in Camelot come to a head when Merlin, now under Arthur's control, delivers an ultimatum to Emma: hand over the Dark One dagger and the Promethean spark or he will kill her entire family. Refusing to give in, Emma and our heroes face off against Arthur, Merlin and Zelena in an epic battle of magic and will. Just when the end is in sight, Emma is forced to make a gut-wrenching choice that no one saw coming.
Back in Storybrooke, Zelena's pregnancy...
- 11/11/2015
- by Gina Carbone
- Moviefone
Sookie, Jason, Alcide, Andy and Sam took a road trip to learn more about the Hep-v vampires while Arlene struggled for a way out of Fangtasia in True Blood's "I Found You."
True Blood "I Found You" Recap
The episode began with Jason (Ryan Kwanten) having a sexy dream about vampire Eric (Alexander Skarsgard) – a side effect of having drunk Eric’s blood last season. Just as things start getting truly steamy, Jason wakes up with a jolt in a church.
Outside the church, Sookie (Anna Paquin) suggests to Andy (Chris Bauer) that they track where the Hep-v infected vamps came from by investigating the dead girl Sookie stumbled upon in the woods the other night. Andy, desperate for a lead to find Holly (Lauren Bowles), agrees, and tells Sookie and Alcide (Joe Manganiello) to meet him at the station. As for everybody else, Sam (Sam Trammell) encourages them...
True Blood "I Found You" Recap
The episode began with Jason (Ryan Kwanten) having a sexy dream about vampire Eric (Alexander Skarsgard) – a side effect of having drunk Eric’s blood last season. Just as things start getting truly steamy, Jason wakes up with a jolt in a church.
Outside the church, Sookie (Anna Paquin) suggests to Andy (Chris Bauer) that they track where the Hep-v infected vamps came from by investigating the dead girl Sookie stumbled upon in the woods the other night. Andy, desperate for a lead to find Holly (Lauren Bowles), agrees, and tells Sookie and Alcide (Joe Manganiello) to meet him at the station. As for everybody else, Sam (Sam Trammell) encourages them...
- 6/30/2014
- Uinterview
Actress Anne DeSalvo has corralled a swell cast for her behind-the-camera feature debut, but heavy-handed scripting and unsteady di-rection make "The Amati Girls" a considerably uphill battle.
There's no shortage of heart-ache or humor in her slice of Italian-American family life, but more often than not, the portions are dished out in heaping melodramatic hunks that allow her capable performers little breathing room.
Distributed by Providence Entertainment, which had success with "The Omega Code", the picture won't make much noise in theaters before its scheduled airing on Fox Family Channel this year.
DeSalvo has obviously drawn from elements of her Philadelphia family background for her portrait of the four sisters and their widowed mother who comprise the Amati famiglia.
There's Grace (Mercedes Ruehl), the eldest, who's constantly being taken for granted by her demanding husband, Joe Paul Sorvino), much to the aggravation of sister Denise (Dinah Manoff), who always seems to be chasing another dead-end dream.
Sibling Christine (Sean Young -- yes, that Sean Young, and she appears every bit as self--conscious about trying to pass for ethnic as one would think) has separated from her workaholic hubby, Paul (Jamey Sheridan), and it's a move that doesn't sit well with widowed matriarch Dolly (Cloris Leachman), who believes in the concept of quietly accepting the cards one is dealt even as she begins making plans for her unlikely imminent funeral.
They all form an overly protective circle around the mentally challenged baby of the family, Dolores (Lily Knight), who forces them to re-examine their ap-proach when she meets her first boyfriend (Doug Spinuzza).
As one would expect from a cast that includes the likes of Ruehl, Sorvino and Leachman, there are some fine performances to be found, and it's very apparent that DeSalvo's experience as an actress points to her greatest strength as a director.
Good, too, are Knight and Manoff, while Mark Harmon does sympathetic work as Manoff's attentive beau. Manoff's real-life mom, Lee Grant, also is on hand as the colorful Aunt Splendora.
With that able a group, De-Salvo's scripting needed a much lighter touch than the weighty significance that threatens to sink every other scene.
Even more effective, airier mo-ments barely escape the overzealous attention of Conrad Pope's score, which lays on the goop thicker than a potful of pasta sauce.
THE AMATI GIRLS
Providence Entertainment
Fox Family-Providence Entertainment and Tricor Entertainment
A Triple Axel and Heritage Film Group production
An Anne DeSalvo Film
Director-screenwriter: Anne DeSalvo
Producers: James Alex, Steven C. Johnson
Executive producers: Howard Kazanjian, Craig C. Darian
Producers: Michael I. Levy, Henry M. Shea Jr.
Director of photography: Frank Byers
Production designer: Jane Stewart
Editors: C. Timothy O'Meara, David L. Bertman
Costume designer: Amy Stofsky
Music: Conrad Pope
Casting: Mary Jo Slater, Jean Scocchimarro
Color/stereo
Cast:
Grace: Mercedes Ruehl
Joe: Paul Sorvino
Dolly: Cloris Leachman
Aunt Splendora: Lee Grant
Lawrence: Mark Harmon
Christine: Sean Young
Denise: Dinah Manoff
Paul: Jamey Sheridan
Dolores: Lily Knight
Running time -- 91 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
There's no shortage of heart-ache or humor in her slice of Italian-American family life, but more often than not, the portions are dished out in heaping melodramatic hunks that allow her capable performers little breathing room.
Distributed by Providence Entertainment, which had success with "The Omega Code", the picture won't make much noise in theaters before its scheduled airing on Fox Family Channel this year.
DeSalvo has obviously drawn from elements of her Philadelphia family background for her portrait of the four sisters and their widowed mother who comprise the Amati famiglia.
There's Grace (Mercedes Ruehl), the eldest, who's constantly being taken for granted by her demanding husband, Joe Paul Sorvino), much to the aggravation of sister Denise (Dinah Manoff), who always seems to be chasing another dead-end dream.
Sibling Christine (Sean Young -- yes, that Sean Young, and she appears every bit as self--conscious about trying to pass for ethnic as one would think) has separated from her workaholic hubby, Paul (Jamey Sheridan), and it's a move that doesn't sit well with widowed matriarch Dolly (Cloris Leachman), who believes in the concept of quietly accepting the cards one is dealt even as she begins making plans for her unlikely imminent funeral.
They all form an overly protective circle around the mentally challenged baby of the family, Dolores (Lily Knight), who forces them to re-examine their ap-proach when she meets her first boyfriend (Doug Spinuzza).
As one would expect from a cast that includes the likes of Ruehl, Sorvino and Leachman, there are some fine performances to be found, and it's very apparent that DeSalvo's experience as an actress points to her greatest strength as a director.
Good, too, are Knight and Manoff, while Mark Harmon does sympathetic work as Manoff's attentive beau. Manoff's real-life mom, Lee Grant, also is on hand as the colorful Aunt Splendora.
With that able a group, De-Salvo's scripting needed a much lighter touch than the weighty significance that threatens to sink every other scene.
Even more effective, airier mo-ments barely escape the overzealous attention of Conrad Pope's score, which lays on the goop thicker than a potful of pasta sauce.
THE AMATI GIRLS
Providence Entertainment
Fox Family-Providence Entertainment and Tricor Entertainment
A Triple Axel and Heritage Film Group production
An Anne DeSalvo Film
Director-screenwriter: Anne DeSalvo
Producers: James Alex, Steven C. Johnson
Executive producers: Howard Kazanjian, Craig C. Darian
Producers: Michael I. Levy, Henry M. Shea Jr.
Director of photography: Frank Byers
Production designer: Jane Stewart
Editors: C. Timothy O'Meara, David L. Bertman
Costume designer: Amy Stofsky
Music: Conrad Pope
Casting: Mary Jo Slater, Jean Scocchimarro
Color/stereo
Cast:
Grace: Mercedes Ruehl
Joe: Paul Sorvino
Dolly: Cloris Leachman
Aunt Splendora: Lee Grant
Lawrence: Mark Harmon
Christine: Sean Young
Denise: Dinah Manoff
Paul: Jamey Sheridan
Dolores: Lily Knight
Running time -- 91 minutes
MPAA rating: PG...
- 1/19/2001
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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