Screen has first-look image of Roberts.
Jackrabbit Media has acquired worldwide rights to the Eric Roberts western thriller 5 Outlaws and commenced sales in Toronto this week.
Mark Padilla, Jackrabbit’s president of worldwide sales and acquisitions, is showing exclusive first footage to buyers on the story from first-time directors Joey Palmroos and Austen Paul.
5 Outlaws centres on the titular bandits who awaken to find their hard-earned bag of loot from a train heist is mysteriously empty. Each cowboy becomes the focus of a high-stakes interrogation as the group attempts to unmask the thief among them.
With no witnesses and only...
Jackrabbit Media has acquired worldwide rights to the Eric Roberts western thriller 5 Outlaws and commenced sales in Toronto this week.
Mark Padilla, Jackrabbit’s president of worldwide sales and acquisitions, is showing exclusive first footage to buyers on the story from first-time directors Joey Palmroos and Austen Paul.
5 Outlaws centres on the titular bandits who awaken to find their hard-earned bag of loot from a train heist is mysteriously empty. Each cowboy becomes the focus of a high-stakes interrogation as the group attempts to unmask the thief among them.
With no witnesses and only...
- 9/8/2023
- by Jeremy Kay
- ScreenDaily
Harold (Bruce Davison), his wife Betty (Arianne Zucker) and their daughters Maggie and Sarah (Holly Taylor and Rita Volk) live in an isolated farmhouse, many miles from their nearest neighbours. Harold rules over the family, enforcing a rigidly patriarchal interpretation of the bible. When three young men turn up at their door after getting a puncture, Maggie senses an opportunity to get away from her controlling and increasingly dangerous father.
We have seen a wide variety of horror film villains who are religious fundamentalists, whether it’s as far back as someone like Witchfinder General’s Matthew Hopkins or more recent examples like the Westboro Baptist Church inspired group in Kevin Smith’s Red State, or the Jim Jones like cult in The Sacrament, or any number of others over the years. We Still Say Grace doesn’t do much new with the plot machinations its setting and characters throw up,...
We have seen a wide variety of horror film villains who are religious fundamentalists, whether it’s as far back as someone like Witchfinder General’s Matthew Hopkins or more recent examples like the Westboro Baptist Church inspired group in Kevin Smith’s Red State, or the Jim Jones like cult in The Sacrament, or any number of others over the years. We Still Say Grace doesn’t do much new with the plot machinations its setting and characters throw up,...
- 5/6/2021
- by Sam Inglis
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Stars: Holly Taylor, Bruce Davison, Rita Volk, Arianne Zucker, Dallas Hart, Frankie Wolf, Xavier J. Watson | Written and Directed by Brad Helmink, John Rauschelbach
The last five years or so of horror movies have shown a rise in films that are bleak and sometimes difficult to watch. Perhaps Ari Aster, with Hereditary and Midsommar, has popularised this style but big hits such as The Quiet Place, alongside classics like The Nightingale have shown that there are many great films to come from this. We Still Say Grace tries its best to sit alongside the best of them.
That dark and ominous tone is here right from the first scene as we see an apparent suicide pact with a father and his daughters. It doesn’t go quite as expected though and when a group of three guys get stranded nearby when their car’s tyres get punctures, one of the daughters seems eager to escape.
The last five years or so of horror movies have shown a rise in films that are bleak and sometimes difficult to watch. Perhaps Ari Aster, with Hereditary and Midsommar, has popularised this style but big hits such as The Quiet Place, alongside classics like The Nightingale have shown that there are many great films to come from this. We Still Say Grace tries its best to sit alongside the best of them.
That dark and ominous tone is here right from the first scene as we see an apparent suicide pact with a father and his daughters. It doesn’t go quite as expected though and when a group of three guys get stranded nearby when their car’s tyres get punctures, one of the daughters seems eager to escape.
- 5/4/2021
- by Alain Elliott
- Nerdly
Netflix has announced the cast for its upcoming, live-action Greenhouse Academy TV show (formerly known as The Greenhouse). The Greenhouse Academy series regulars are: Jessica Amlee, Cinthya Carmona, Nadine Ellis, Reina Hardesty, Dallas Hart, Bj Mitchell, Ariel Mortman, Chris O’Neal, Benjamin Papac, Finn Roberts, Parker Stevenson, and Grace Van Dien. Ishai Golan is set to recur.Per Netflix, "Paula Yoo (West Wing, Defiance, Eureka) is adapting with showrunner Giora Chamizer, who wrote and created the original series. Nutz Productions, a subsidiary company of Ananey Communications, will produce the series for Netflix."Read More…...
- 8/4/2016
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Stars: Ethan Peck, India Eisley, Natalie Hall, Bruce Davison, James Adam Lim, Scott Alan Smith, Zack Ward, Mim Drew, Dallas Hart, Madelaine Petsch, Anna Harr | Written by Pearry Teo, Josh Nadler | Based on the comic by Everette Hartsoe | Directed by Pearry Teo
If there’s one director whose films I will watch without hesitation or question, it’s Pearry Teo. In fact his filmic career is actually one that is key to mine. His second film, the 2009 fear flick Necromentia (which I still think out-Hellraiser’d Hellraiser itself), was one of the first films I ever reviewed professionally; and I’ve reviewed each and every one of his films since. Why? Because of the impact his twisted vision in Necromentia had on me and because no matter the story, no matter the budget, Teo always finds something interesting, admittedly often dark, to do with the subject matter.
Teo’s...
If there’s one director whose films I will watch without hesitation or question, it’s Pearry Teo. In fact his filmic career is actually one that is key to mine. His second film, the 2009 fear flick Necromentia (which I still think out-Hellraiser’d Hellraiser itself), was one of the first films I ever reviewed professionally; and I’ve reviewed each and every one of his films since. Why? Because of the impact his twisted vision in Necromentia had on me and because no matter the story, no matter the budget, Teo always finds something interesting, admittedly often dark, to do with the subject matter.
Teo’s...
- 5/10/2016
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Reviewed by Jonathan Weichsel
MoreHorror.com
The Curse of the Sleeping Beauty is directed by Pearry Reginald Teo, written by Pearry Reginald Teo and Josh Nadler, and stars Ethan Peck, India Eisley, Natalie Hall, Bruce Davison, James Adam Lim, Scott Alan Smith Scott Alan Smith, Zack Ward, Mim Drew, Dallas Hart, Jacqueline Goehner, Madelaine Petsch, Ryan Egnatoff, Elizabeth Knowelden, T.J. Vindigni , Anna Harr, and Alexandra Bard
The Curse of Sleeping Beauty is part horror, part dark fantasy, part supernatural love story, and part haunted house movie. A film that tries to fit so much into a brisk eighty-nine minutes could easily wind up being a mess, but Sleeping Beauty combines its various genres and subgenres into something that feels like a coherent whole. The Curse of Sleeping Beauty might not fit comfortably into any one genre, but I say if a film works, it works, and The Curse of Sleeping beauty works.
MoreHorror.com
The Curse of the Sleeping Beauty is directed by Pearry Reginald Teo, written by Pearry Reginald Teo and Josh Nadler, and stars Ethan Peck, India Eisley, Natalie Hall, Bruce Davison, James Adam Lim, Scott Alan Smith Scott Alan Smith, Zack Ward, Mim Drew, Dallas Hart, Jacqueline Goehner, Madelaine Petsch, Ryan Egnatoff, Elizabeth Knowelden, T.J. Vindigni , Anna Harr, and Alexandra Bard
The Curse of Sleeping Beauty is part horror, part dark fantasy, part supernatural love story, and part haunted house movie. A film that tries to fit so much into a brisk eighty-nine minutes could easily wind up being a mess, but Sleeping Beauty combines its various genres and subgenres into something that feels like a coherent whole. The Curse of Sleeping Beauty might not fit comfortably into any one genre, but I say if a film works, it works, and The Curse of Sleeping beauty works.
- 5/10/2016
- by admin
- MoreHorror
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