Cannes — “Wisting,” a high-end crime drama co-starring “The Matrix” and “Jessica Jones’” Carrie-Anne Moss, has been acquired by BBC Four in the U.K., Banijay Rights, the leading distribution arm of Banijay Group. announced on Friday, in the run-up to this year’s Mipcom TV trade fair.
The sale, in the benchmark overseas sales territory for Scandinavian series – “Borgen” broke out internationally after clinching BBC Four broadcast – comes on one of the highest-profiles of recent Nordic crime thrillers.
“Wisting” is Nordic Noir – set in stunning lanscapes, backed by Scandinavian powerhouse Viaplay, adapting two highly popular bestselling novels by Jørn Lier Hors. It has also cast highly regarded Norwegian film-tv star Sven Nordin in the titular role of William Wisting, a taciturn but relentless homicide detectivewho has dedicated his life to being a force for good, he believes, in the small Norwegian coastal town of Larvik, even if that comes at...
The sale, in the benchmark overseas sales territory for Scandinavian series – “Borgen” broke out internationally after clinching BBC Four broadcast – comes on one of the highest-profiles of recent Nordic crime thrillers.
“Wisting” is Nordic Noir – set in stunning lanscapes, backed by Scandinavian powerhouse Viaplay, adapting two highly popular bestselling novels by Jørn Lier Hors. It has also cast highly regarded Norwegian film-tv star Sven Nordin in the titular role of William Wisting, a taciturn but relentless homicide detectivewho has dedicated his life to being a force for good, he believes, in the small Norwegian coastal town of Larvik, even if that comes at...
- 10/11/2019
- by John Hopewell
- Variety Film + TV
Banijay Rights will bring soon-to-launch Scandi-Noir crime thriller “Wisting,” based on the best-selling novels of Jørn Lier Horst, to the market at this year’s MipTV.
“Wisting” was co-created by Kathrine Valen Zeiner and director Trygve Allister Diesen, and follows homicide detective William Wisting on the most difficult case of his career, hunting down a dangerous American serial killer, all the while his journalist daughter is pursuing leads that will put her right in the killer’s path. Things really hit the fan when a skeleton from Wisting’s past arises, and the inspector becomes the inspected.
The series stars “The Matrix” and “Jessica Jones” alum Carrie-Anne Moss and long-time Norwegian film and TV star Sven Nordin.
Banijay Rights is handling international sales. It’s produced by Cinenord and Good Company Films in co-production with Viaplay and Degeto Film who have broadcast rights in Norway and Germany respectively, TV3 Norway and Ripple World Pictures.
“Wisting” was co-created by Kathrine Valen Zeiner and director Trygve Allister Diesen, and follows homicide detective William Wisting on the most difficult case of his career, hunting down a dangerous American serial killer, all the while his journalist daughter is pursuing leads that will put her right in the killer’s path. Things really hit the fan when a skeleton from Wisting’s past arises, and the inspector becomes the inspected.
The series stars “The Matrix” and “Jessica Jones” alum Carrie-Anne Moss and long-time Norwegian film and TV star Sven Nordin.
Banijay Rights is handling international sales. It’s produced by Cinenord and Good Company Films in co-production with Viaplay and Degeto Film who have broadcast rights in Norway and Germany respectively, TV3 Norway and Ripple World Pictures.
- 4/7/2019
- by Jamie Lang
- Variety Film + TV
New projects revealed from I, Anna director Barnaby Southcombe, When Animals Dream filmmaker Jonas Alexander Arnby and actor/director Hiam Abbass.Scroll down for full line-up
The Les Arcs Coproduction Village (Dec 12-15), held as part of the Les Arcs European Film Festival (Dec 12-19), has unveiled the projects for its 7th edition.
A total of 25 projects have been selected for the three-day development and financing platform, which has previously showcased festival hits including Lazlo Nemes’ Son Of Saul, Alice Rohrwacher’s The Wonders, Grimur Hakonarson’s Rams and Runar Runarsson’s Sparrows.
This year’s line-up includes projects from 13 countries and five from Norway, selected as part of this year’s Norwegian Focus. Eight debut features are included in the selection.
Representatives of the projects will have one-to-one pre-scheduled meetings with producers, sales agents and distributors.
Two conferences will also be held during the Coproduction Village: one about the production of Joachim Trier’s Cannes competition...
The Les Arcs Coproduction Village (Dec 12-15), held as part of the Les Arcs European Film Festival (Dec 12-19), has unveiled the projects for its 7th edition.
A total of 25 projects have been selected for the three-day development and financing platform, which has previously showcased festival hits including Lazlo Nemes’ Son Of Saul, Alice Rohrwacher’s The Wonders, Grimur Hakonarson’s Rams and Runar Runarsson’s Sparrows.
This year’s line-up includes projects from 13 countries and five from Norway, selected as part of this year’s Norwegian Focus. Eight debut features are included in the selection.
Representatives of the projects will have one-to-one pre-scheduled meetings with producers, sales agents and distributors.
Two conferences will also be held during the Coproduction Village: one about the production of Joachim Trier’s Cannes competition...
- 11/10/2015
- by michael.rosser@screendaily.com (Michael Rosser)
- ScreenDaily
Director Lucky McKee made a bit of a splash a few years back with the release of May. Little was heard from the director until 2011 when he seemed to re-appear with The Woman, a movie which earned both praise and disinterest from our correspondents. The gap between the two pictures wasn't completely devoid of work, he did release what I consider his best film, the Brian Cox starring Red which he co-directed with Trygve Allister Diesen. There have always been a few years between his projects but it looks like the schedule of production is shifting because McKee has lined up his next project and for it, he's going back to the beginning. [Continued ...]...
- 11/20/2012
- QuietEarth.us
First, a clarification: Yes, this is a review about a movie called Red, and it stars Brian Cox. However, it's not this Red (which also starred Brian Cox). That one came out in 2010. This one came out in 2008 and is completely different. I know, puzzling.
Anyway.
Red is one of those pleasant, unexpected surprises -- even if it's also terribly depressing. Brian Cox stars as Avery Ludlow, a quiet, lonely older gentlemen who lives in a small town, idling his time away either working at the general store he owns, fishing, or hanging out with his loyal mutt, Red. One fateful day, Avery and Red are quietly fishing when a trio of obnoxious, surly teenagers come upon them. The kids grow more and more agitated with Avery's placid, placating responses, and in the ensuing harassment and robbery, tragedy strikes.
Let's just get it out of the way: They kill the dog.
Anyway.
Red is one of those pleasant, unexpected surprises -- even if it's also terribly depressing. Brian Cox stars as Avery Ludlow, a quiet, lonely older gentlemen who lives in a small town, idling his time away either working at the general store he owns, fishing, or hanging out with his loyal mutt, Red. One fateful day, Avery and Red are quietly fishing when a trio of obnoxious, surly teenagers come upon them. The kids grow more and more agitated with Avery's placid, placating responses, and in the ensuing harassment and robbery, tragedy strikes.
Let's just get it out of the way: They kill the dog.
- 4/4/2011
- by TK
Offspring Directed by Andrew van den Houten The horror genre must be doing wonders to Maine’s tourism development. Having spent many a summer on the quaint sandy beaches in small town Maine, never did I once come across a cannibalistic feral child wielding an impressively handcrafted axe nor did I encounter any wild mutts with the sole intention of playing fetch with my intestines. I did, however, see old men, a wicker shop and a life size lobster, which at night time could seem pretty scary. And yet here we have Jack Ketchum’s Offspring (directed by Andrew van den Houten) a traumatically gory look at a nomadic cannibalistic family living in backwoods Maine, feeding off the meat of small town beachcombers, telling me yet another story about how there’s no fucking way I’m ever going back to New England. It isn’t every day that you...
- 10/20/2009
- by Detroit
- SoundOnSight
Over the course of modern horror history, it has become fairly commonplace for young actresses (from Jamie Lee Curtis to Angela Bettis) to work their way up through the genre and establish positions of prominence within it. Rising young actors making a significant mark in fright fare have been less common—but one current exception is Kyle Gallner, who stars in the recent hit The Haunting In Connecticut (out on Lionsgate DVDs and Blu-ray next week), appears this fall in the much-buzzed-about Jennifer’S Body (see a new exclusive pic below) and tangles with Freddy Krueger in next year’s A Nightmare On Elm Street remake.
The 22-year-old Gallner (who discussed his Nightmare stint here) had amassed a lengthy résumé of TV credits and a number of supporting parts in features before Haunting beckoned with the central role of Matt Campbell, a teenager suffering from cancer who moves with his...
The 22-year-old Gallner (who discussed his Nightmare stint here) had amassed a lengthy résumé of TV credits and a number of supporting parts in features before Haunting beckoned with the central role of Matt Campbell, a teenager suffering from cancer who moves with his...
- 7/9/2009
- by no-reply@fangoria.com (Michael Gingold)
- Fangoria
Red is a revenge story set in contemporary times, yet it has a distinctly Old Western edge. Brian Cox plays Avery Ludlow, an elderly gentleman who only wants to spend the rest of his life peacefully. One day a gang of kids comes across him minding his own business, hold Avery at gunpoint for his 20 dollars and for no apparent reason, they shoot his dog Red. Avery sets out to bring justice, but after finding out that the legal ways are not available for him, he carries out his own unique revenge... While Cox is in the lead, he gets able support by Tom Sizemore and Robert Englund just to mention the better known names. So how does a Danish composer got to score this distinctly American picture?
Soren Hyldgaard previously worked with co-director Trygve Allister Diesen in 1997 on Island of Darkness, but this time not being American was the key to his hiring.
Soren Hyldgaard previously worked with co-director Trygve Allister Diesen in 1997 on Island of Darkness, but this time not being American was the key to his hiring.
- 3/27/2009
- Daily Film Music Blog
You know, we’ve been writing about Brian Cox-starring revenge thriller Red for so long now that I had just kind of assumed that we had run the trailer before now but no, a quick glance through the video archives says that’s not the case. And so with the trailer circulating prior to the film’s Norwegian release I remedy that oversight now.
Set in small-town America, Red derives its title from a 14-year-old dog that is the sole companion of Avery (Brian Cox), an older gentleman who lives alone with his memories in a simple existence posing no threat to anyone. One day while he is fishing, three troublesome teens terrorize him and kill the only thing he has left to love in the world—his dog. He sets out on a quest for an apology, but the situation soon escalates into much more.
Why is a...
Set in small-town America, Red derives its title from a 14-year-old dog that is the sole companion of Avery (Brian Cox), an older gentleman who lives alone with his memories in a simple existence posing no threat to anyone. One day while he is fishing, three troublesome teens terrorize him and kill the only thing he has left to love in the world—his dog. He sets out on a quest for an apology, but the situation soon escalates into much more.
Why is a...
- 11/17/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
Moscow -- The 24th edition of the Warsaw International Film Festival, which runs Oct. 10 - 19, has announced its competition lineup. Many of the films come form Eastern and Central Europe or are co-productions with the participation of the region’s countries.
The host country will be represented by Malgoska Szumowska’s “33 Scenes From Life,” co-produced with Germany, a drama about a successful artist whose seemingly happy family life one day collapses. Croatian/Slovenian “No One’s Son” by Arsen Anton Ostojic deals with the aftermath of the war in the former Yugoslavia, while “The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner” by Stefan Komandarev explores Bulgaria’s communist past.
Kirill Serebrennikov’s “Yuri's Day,” one of the most critically acclaimed Russian movies this year, tells a controversial and allegorical story about prosperous opera diva Lyubov’s visit to her provincial hometown.
The U.S. will be represented by...
The host country will be represented by Malgoska Szumowska’s “33 Scenes From Life,” co-produced with Germany, a drama about a successful artist whose seemingly happy family life one day collapses. Croatian/Slovenian “No One’s Son” by Arsen Anton Ostojic deals with the aftermath of the war in the former Yugoslavia, while “The World Is Big and Salvation Lurks Around the Corner” by Stefan Komandarev explores Bulgaria’s communist past.
Kirill Serebrennikov’s “Yuri's Day,” one of the most critically acclaimed Russian movies this year, tells a controversial and allegorical story about prosperous opera diva Lyubov’s visit to her provincial hometown.
The U.S. will be represented by...
- 10/2/2008
- by By Vladimir Kozlov
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Trygve Allister Diesen has an unpronouncable name and a clearly awesome amount of ability. Co-directing Red with Lucky McKee, Diesen proves to the perceptive part of the world that he kicks a ton of ass behind a camera. For McKee, this marks the third consecutive film I've loved and probably the one I've felt the most from.Red's a movie about an older southern gent whose dog is murdered by a group of young monsters. The titular best friend was all Avery Ludlow had left of his once prosperous family, and in watching the film you'll discover what happened to the rest of it. Lemme tell you - it's not a happy time at the movies. In fact, the scene felt like it was punching me in my damned heart... and it gives the old mantra of "Show, don't tell," a swift Van-Damme style kick to the face.You know,...
- 8/9/2008
- JustPressPlay.net
Kindly old Northwest widower Brian Cox wakes up early one Sunday, feeds his dog Red, then drives out to his favorite quiet fishing spot for a day of idling. In the late afternoon, three snotty teenagers emerge from the woods brandishing a shotgun, and ask if Cox has any money. He tries to placate them, but their ringleader, Noel Fisher, shoots Red. When Cox tracks down Fisher's wealthy father (Tom Sizemore) and tries to extract some restitution, Sizemore refuses "to do the right thing," so Cox exhausts his legal options, then plans his own justice. Norwegian director Trygve Allister Diesen and cult horror helmer Lucky McKee—working from a script by Stephen Susco—adapt Jack Ketchum's suspense novel Red into a low-boil revenge drama about people who never asked for trouble, and don't handle it well when trouble comes their way. Cox gets hassled, but then starts doing the hassling,...
- 8/7/2008
- by Noel Murray
- avclub.com
By Neil Pedley
This week's delectable delights include, amongst other things, such highbrow morsels as a gallery retrospective on D.I.Y. art and a crash course in the history of the California vineyards. If that's not your cup of proverbial tea, there's always psychotic bikers and the ballad of two stoned losers on the run from gangsters and the police.
"Beautiful Losers"
More than 15 years after founding the hugely influential Alleged Gallery in New York, the freelance curator Aaron Rose continues to serve as a cornerstone of the now-global D.I.Y. art scene. Here he teams with "Blair Witch" actor-turned-director Joshua Leonard to chart the evolution and subsequent commercialization of a movement whose genesis was found in a group of outcasts, slackers and misfits from the fringes of subculture. Emerging from the dirty little worlds of surfing, skateboarding and street graffiti, a group of artists including the likes of Harmony Korine,...
This week's delectable delights include, amongst other things, such highbrow morsels as a gallery retrospective on D.I.Y. art and a crash course in the history of the California vineyards. If that's not your cup of proverbial tea, there's always psychotic bikers and the ballad of two stoned losers on the run from gangsters and the police.
"Beautiful Losers"
More than 15 years after founding the hugely influential Alleged Gallery in New York, the freelance curator Aaron Rose continues to serve as a cornerstone of the now-global D.I.Y. art scene. Here he teams with "Blair Witch" actor-turned-director Joshua Leonard to chart the evolution and subsequent commercialization of a movement whose genesis was found in a group of outcasts, slackers and misfits from the fringes of subculture. Emerging from the dirty little worlds of surfing, skateboarding and street graffiti, a group of artists including the likes of Harmony Korine,...
- 8/4/2008
- by Neil Pedley
- ifc.com
Apologies for the lack of updates the past couple of days. I blame the exhaustingly stylized, rockabilly zombie movie Flick, which engendered so much cinematic bile, I feared the excess would leak into the other films I had planned to discuss. Luckily, today’s festival topping (so far) double feature comprised of Stuart Gordon’s horror morality tale Stuck (review) and a dark and moving adaptation of Jack Ketchum Red (review), finally expectorated the celluloid loogie I had built up. With Flick spat to the gutter, let’s talk about the good stuff we saw!
Day eleven was a high point of the festival, a day that elevated the found footage horror genre with Christopher Denham’s Home Movie (review), produced by Andrew van den Houten (who we earlier reported is set to start shooting Jack Ketchum’s Offspring). Paul also caught Trailer Park of Terror (review), a fun trailer...
Day eleven was a high point of the festival, a day that elevated the found footage horror genre with Christopher Denham’s Home Movie (review), produced by Andrew van den Houten (who we earlier reported is set to start shooting Jack Ketchum’s Offspring). Paul also caught Trailer Park of Terror (review), a fun trailer...
- 7/16/2008
- by Johnny Butane
- DreadCentral.com
So, Dread's two-year anniversary got me to thinking ...
We run so many news stories on any given day that often some really interesting tidbits get pushed off the home page and lost in the shuffle. To help remedy that, I thought I'd start doing a recap at the end of every week that you can peruse at your leisure to see what you might have missed during the previous seven days. The Weekly Wrap-Up will be a work in progress for a while so comments, feedback, etc., are much appreciated.
From July 5-11, these are a few of the highlights:
Repo! finally got a release date (November 7th for those too lazy to click) and a major update to its official site. Read more here!
DC posted an exclusive -- and totally badass -- commentary for The Signal courtesy of Lewis (Aj Bowen) and Clark (Scott Poythress) that you won't find anywhere but here!
We run so many news stories on any given day that often some really interesting tidbits get pushed off the home page and lost in the shuffle. To help remedy that, I thought I'd start doing a recap at the end of every week that you can peruse at your leisure to see what you might have missed during the previous seven days. The Weekly Wrap-Up will be a work in progress for a while so comments, feedback, etc., are much appreciated.
From July 5-11, these are a few of the highlights:
Repo! finally got a release date (November 7th for those too lazy to click) and a major update to its official site. Read more here!
DC posted an exclusive -- and totally badass -- commentary for The Signal courtesy of Lewis (Aj Bowen) and Clark (Scott Poythress) that you won't find anywhere but here!
- 7/12/2008
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
Magnolia Pictures has finally settled on its release plans for Lucky McKee and Trygve Allister Diesen’s Red, an adaptation of the Jack Ketchum novel of the same name.
The film will open in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, August 8th, with a slow rollout to more theaters to follow. Brian Cox, Tom Sizemore, Robert Englund, Kim Dickens and more star in this haunting tale about a man (Cox) who loses his only companion, a 14-year-old ginger-haired dog named Red, when some reckless teenagers with a shotgun show up at his favorite fishing spot. Determined to track them down and bring the truth out about what they did, he’s stopped at every turn by the closed minds in his small town.
We’ll have more info, including a theater/city listing for Red’s larger opening, as soon as it’s available. Red follows the tradition started...
The film will open in New York and Los Angeles on Friday, August 8th, with a slow rollout to more theaters to follow. Brian Cox, Tom Sizemore, Robert Englund, Kim Dickens and more star in this haunting tale about a man (Cox) who loses his only companion, a 14-year-old ginger-haired dog named Red, when some reckless teenagers with a shotgun show up at his favorite fishing spot. Determined to track them down and bring the truth out about what they did, he’s stopped at every turn by the closed minds in his small town.
We’ll have more info, including a theater/city listing for Red’s larger opening, as soon as it’s available. Red follows the tradition started...
- 7/8/2008
- by Johnny Butane
- DreadCentral.com
- Downright horror meets patient eloquence in the upcoming release Red. THR reports that the thriller, directed by Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee (May, The Woods), has been picked up by Magnolia Pictures. The pic premiered at Sundance earlier this year and stars Brian Cox as an elderly man seeking revenge for the thoughtless murder of his dog by teenagers. Tom Sizemore, Robert Englund and Amanda Plummer co-star. The thriller was initiated by McKee then finely finished by Norweigen helmer Diesen, who "allows events to stack up, keeping you both intrigued and questioning each character's actions and motives" (John Cooper, Nfi). Despite its harsh subject matter, "Red demonstrates a real elegance in its commitment to a relatively straightforward story, allowing the characters' emotions to come to a slow boil" (Peter Debruge, Variety). The pic is based off of the novel of the same name by horror fiction writer Jack Ketchum.
- 4/29/2008
- IONCINEMA.com
NEW YORK -- Magnolia Pictures has acquired North American rights to this year's Sundance entry Red, a thriller starring Brian Cox, Robert Englund, Amanda Plummer and Tom Sizemore.
Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee's film centers on an elderly man (Cox) seeking revenge on a teen who murdered his dog.
Piracy could be an issue if the film attracts interest, since Magnolia will release it via sister network HDNet's Ultra VOD program before theatrical showings in late summer. VOD airings may have hurt Magnolia's much-hyped Brian DePalma film Redacted, which earned just $65,000 in US theaters.
Cinetic Media and Submarine repped the filmmakers in the deal, and Bleiberg Entertainment will be repping international sales in Cannes.
Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee's film centers on an elderly man (Cox) seeking revenge on a teen who murdered his dog.
Piracy could be an issue if the film attracts interest, since Magnolia will release it via sister network HDNet's Ultra VOD program before theatrical showings in late summer. VOD airings may have hurt Magnolia's much-hyped Brian DePalma film Redacted, which earned just $65,000 in US theaters.
Cinetic Media and Submarine repped the filmmakers in the deal, and Bleiberg Entertainment will be repping international sales in Cannes.
- 4/28/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
PARK CITY -- Norwegian directors Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee have filled the boots of Gary Cooper, Jimmy Stewart and Clint Eastwood in this modern-day, old-style Western. A simple story set against the backdrop of the American West, "Red" should land in the black on cable or as video rentals.
In the grand tradition of a white hat vs. a black hat, "Red" is the story of one man who sets out to avenge the murder of his dog, Red. Starring Brian Cox as Avery, a man who has lost his family in tragic circumstances, "Red" is a taut and direct tale of revenge. It brims with the most satisfying ingredients of classic Westerns.
In this well-crafted case, the townfolk and the system is impotent to deal with the wrong. In short, Avery must take on the region's rich bully, the father of the snotwad who killed his dog. And he must do it alone. As the decent, nonviolent man who must use his gun, Brian Cox embodies the solid virtues of the best of Western heroes.
Although simple, "Red" is riveting. Screenwriter Stephen Susco has spun a taut tale of revenge and layered it with keen insights into the power structure of rural towns. Directors Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee carve out a majestically spare movie, with evident reverence for the old masters, Howard Hawks and John Ford.
Technical contributions are topnotch, especially cinematographer Harald Gunnar Paalgard's succinct framing and psychologically evocative lighting.
RED
A Tenk Prod.
Directors:
Trygve Allister Diesen, Lucky McKee
Screenwriter: Stephen Susco
Producers: Trygve Allister Diesen, Norman Dreyfuss
Executive producer: Bill Strauss, Lawrence Mattis, Randy Ostrow
Director of photography: Harald Gunnar Paalgard: Editor: Jon Endre Mork
Cast :
Avery Ludlow: Brian Cox
Michael: Tom Sizemore
Danny: Noel Fisher
Harold: Kyle Gallner
Pete: Shiloh Fernandez
Mrs. Doust: Amanda Plummer
Running time – 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
In the grand tradition of a white hat vs. a black hat, "Red" is the story of one man who sets out to avenge the murder of his dog, Red. Starring Brian Cox as Avery, a man who has lost his family in tragic circumstances, "Red" is a taut and direct tale of revenge. It brims with the most satisfying ingredients of classic Westerns.
In this well-crafted case, the townfolk and the system is impotent to deal with the wrong. In short, Avery must take on the region's rich bully, the father of the snotwad who killed his dog. And he must do it alone. As the decent, nonviolent man who must use his gun, Brian Cox embodies the solid virtues of the best of Western heroes.
Although simple, "Red" is riveting. Screenwriter Stephen Susco has spun a taut tale of revenge and layered it with keen insights into the power structure of rural towns. Directors Trygve Allister Diesen and Lucky McKee carve out a majestically spare movie, with evident reverence for the old masters, Howard Hawks and John Ford.
Technical contributions are topnotch, especially cinematographer Harald Gunnar Paalgard's succinct framing and psychologically evocative lighting.
RED
A Tenk Prod.
Directors:
Trygve Allister Diesen, Lucky McKee
Screenwriter: Stephen Susco
Producers: Trygve Allister Diesen, Norman Dreyfuss
Executive producer: Bill Strauss, Lawrence Mattis, Randy Ostrow
Director of photography: Harald Gunnar Paalgard: Editor: Jon Endre Mork
Cast :
Avery Ludlow: Brian Cox
Michael: Tom Sizemore
Danny: Noel Fisher
Harold: Kyle Gallner
Pete: Shiloh Fernandez
Mrs. Doust: Amanda Plummer
Running time – 98 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 1/26/2008
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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