Exclusive: Level 33 Entertainment, the Los Angeles-based sales and distribution outfit, has taken global rights to British thriller Eve ahead of the film’s world premiere at the San Diego International Film Festival on Saturday, October 19.
Set in London’s Notting Hill, the film follows two actresses who have auditioned for the role of Eve in a screen adaptation of Paradise Lost. When one of them is awarded the role, her excitement is quickly tempered by a disturbing home invasion. Unsure of who or what is tormenting her, her sense of reality starts to spiral out of control, threatening her sanity.
Rory Kindersley directed the project, his feature debut, with Toby Cook and Matt Cook producing for their outfit Fablemaze.
Christine Marzano stars, with Rachel Warren, Andrew Lee Potts, Elizabeth Healey, Lex Shrapnel and Jonathan Forbes also in the cast.
Level 33 is lining up a release in early spring 2020. The deal...
Set in London’s Notting Hill, the film follows two actresses who have auditioned for the role of Eve in a screen adaptation of Paradise Lost. When one of them is awarded the role, her excitement is quickly tempered by a disturbing home invasion. Unsure of who or what is tormenting her, her sense of reality starts to spiral out of control, threatening her sanity.
Rory Kindersley directed the project, his feature debut, with Toby Cook and Matt Cook producing for their outfit Fablemaze.
Christine Marzano stars, with Rachel Warren, Andrew Lee Potts, Elizabeth Healey, Lex Shrapnel and Jonathan Forbes also in the cast.
Level 33 is lining up a release in early spring 2020. The deal...
- 10/18/2019
- by Tom Grater
- Deadline Film + TV
When it debuted in 2015, “Catastrophe” quickly made its mark by telling the truth. Everything about Sharon (Sharon Horgan) and Rob (Rob Delaney) getting together happened hard and fast, from their would-be one-night stand to their decision to have the resulting baby to Rob moving across the ocean for Sharon and their child. Accordingly, the couple’s conversations get right to the point — there’s no time to beat around the bush, spare feelings, or otherwise sugarcoat the day-to-day facts of life when your life is intertwined with two others and all three are suddenly hurtling forward at a mile a minute.
Credit to the co-creators and co-stars, these discussions serve as the entertaining and insightful lifeblood of the series; written with purpose and delivered with tenacity as sharp as the timing, audiences get to watch this fated couple make it work with equal doses of destiny and stubbornness. The language...
Credit to the co-creators and co-stars, these discussions serve as the entertaining and insightful lifeblood of the series; written with purpose and delivered with tenacity as sharp as the timing, audiences get to watch this fated couple make it work with equal doses of destiny and stubbornness. The language...
- 3/15/2019
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
Network: Amazon
Episodes: 24 (half-hour)
Seasons: Four
TV show dates: June 19, 2015 — March 15, 2019
Series status: Cancelled
Performers include: Sharon Horgan, Rob Delaney, Carrie Fisher, Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty.
TV show description:
A British comedy, the Catastrophe TV show centers on Irish woman Sharon Morris (Horgan) and American man Rob Norris (Delaney). After conceiving a child during what was meant to be a one-night-stand in London, the two move in together and try to form a family.
Pregnancy, family troubles, parenthood, unemployment, financial burdens, and friendships all strain their relationship, but Sharon and Rob eventually decide to marry. Will this unlikely couple survive?
Series Finale:
Episode #24
Sharon and Rob...
Episodes: 24 (half-hour)
Seasons: Four
TV show dates: June 19, 2015 — March 15, 2019
Series status: Cancelled
Performers include: Sharon Horgan, Rob Delaney, Carrie Fisher, Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty.
TV show description:
A British comedy, the Catastrophe TV show centers on Irish woman Sharon Morris (Horgan) and American man Rob Norris (Delaney). After conceiving a child during what was meant to be a one-night-stand in London, the two move in together and try to form a family.
Pregnancy, family troubles, parenthood, unemployment, financial burdens, and friendships all strain their relationship, but Sharon and Rob eventually decide to marry. Will this unlikely couple survive?
Series Finale:
Episode #24
Sharon and Rob...
- 2/15/2019
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
"I'm so tired I could cry." Amazon just announced the premiere date for Catastrophe's fourth and final season.
The comedy series centers on Irish woman Sharon Morris (Sharon Horgan) and American man Rob Norris (Rob Delaney). After conceiving a child during what was meant to be a one-night-stand in London, the two move in together and try to form a family. The cast also includes Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty.
Read More…...
The comedy series centers on Irish woman Sharon Morris (Sharon Horgan) and American man Rob Norris (Rob Delaney). After conceiving a child during what was meant to be a one-night-stand in London, the two move in together and try to form a family. The cast also includes Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty.
Read More…...
- 2/13/2019
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Network: AmazonEpisodes: Ongoing (half-hour)Seasons: OngoingTV show dates: June 19, 2015 — presentSeries status: Has not been cancelledPerformers include: Sharon Horgan, Rob Delaney, Carrie Fisher, Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty.TV show description:A British comedy, the Catastrophe TV show centers on Irish woman Sharon Morris (Horgan) and American man Rob Norris (Delaney). After conceiving a child during what was meant to be a one-night-stand in London, the two move in together and try to form a family.Pregnancy, family troubles, parenthood, unemployment, financial burdens, and friendships all strain their relationship, but Sharon and Rob eventually decide to marry. Will this unlikely couple survive?Series Finale:Episode #TbdThis episode...
- 4/28/2017
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney are bringing back the laughs. Season three of their Catastrophe TV show premieres on Amazon, Friday, April 28, 2017. Watch the bleep-filled announcement video, after the jump. And don't worry about Catastrophe being cancelled any time too soon. Amazon renewed it through season four, back in July of 2016, shortly after UK Channel 4 gave the green light to the third and fourth seasons.In addition to Horgan and Delaney, who also write the comedy series, the Catastrophe cast also includes Carrie Fisher, Ashley Jensen, Mark Bonar, Daniel Lapaine, Douglas Hodge, Jonathan Forbes, Gary Lilburn, Tobias Menzies, and Frances Tomelty. The first two seasons are currently available on Amazon Prime.Read More…...
- 2/9/2017
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
ITV's upcoming legal conspiracy thriller Fearless has added Michael Gambon to star alongside Peaky Blinders' Helen McCrory. Shooting on the six-part drama penned by Homeland writer and executive producer Patrick Harbinson, is just beginning. Mammoth Screen (Victoria, Poldark) is producing and has set further main cast including actor-comedian John Bishop, Emmy nominee Robin Weigert (Jessica Jones), Jonathan Forbes (Catastrophe), Wunmi Mosaku (Dancing on the Edge) and…...
- 9/21/2016
- Deadline TV
ITV's upcoming legal conspiracy thriller Fearless has added Michael Gambon to star alongside Peaky Blinders' Helen McCrory. Shooting on the six-part drama penned by Homeland writer and executive producer Patrick Harbinson, is just beginning. Mammoth Screen (Victoria, Poldark) is producing and has set further main cast including actor-comedian John Bishop, Emmy nominee Robin Weigert (Jessica Jones), Jonathan Forbes (Catastrophe), Wunmi Mosaku (Dancing on the Edge) and…...
- 9/21/2016
- Deadline
It's not a catastrophe; it's a success. UK Channel 4 has renewed the Catastrophe TV show for its third and fourth seasons. In the Us, Catastrophe streams on Amazon Prime, where the second season premiered on April 8th. The six-episode third season will go into production in November, for a premiere on Channel 4 in 2017.A romantic British sitcom, Catastrophe stars Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney. The cast also includes Mark Bonnar, Jonathan Forbes, Daniel Lepaine, Ashley Jensen, Marta Barrio, and Sarah Niles. Guest stars include: Carrie Fisher, Tobias Menzies, and Amanda Hale.Read More…...
- 7/12/2016
- by TVSeriesFinale.com
- TVSeriesFinale.com
The perfection of a rose-tinted past, Doris Day’s costumes in Pillow Talk (1959) are some of the most exquisite ever worn on screen. They personify her immaculate character and symbolise the remnants of a dying era; opulence, optimism and the changing face of urbanised fashion.
Costume designer for Pillow Talk was Bill Thomas, although, as became standard with Doris Day pictures, he was not directly responsible for creating her outfits. That job fell to celebrated costume/fashion designer Jean Louis, earning him a ‘Gowns By’ credit on the film. Louis was known for his stylish and often deceptively simple garments, including most famously Rita Hayworth’s strapless black sheath in Gilda (1946). He even created Marilyn Monroe’s sheer ‘President’s dress’, immortalised at John F. Kennedy’s 45th birthday celebration in 1962.
Whether or not Jean Louis was working from specification for Pillow Talk we do not know. Bill Thomas would...
Costume designer for Pillow Talk was Bill Thomas, although, as became standard with Doris Day pictures, he was not directly responsible for creating her outfits. That job fell to celebrated costume/fashion designer Jean Louis, earning him a ‘Gowns By’ credit on the film. Louis was known for his stylish and often deceptively simple garments, including most famously Rita Hayworth’s strapless black sheath in Gilda (1946). He even created Marilyn Monroe’s sheer ‘President’s dress’, immortalised at John F. Kennedy’s 45th birthday celebration in 1962.
Whether or not Jean Louis was working from specification for Pillow Talk we do not know. Bill Thomas would...
- 5/18/2012
- by Chris Laverty
- Clothes on Film
AFI Fest
While films about priests behaving badly aren't exactly in short supply these days, Irish writer-director John Deery weighs in with a challenging, thought-provoking debut that compassionately questions the relevance of celibacy in the Catholic Church.
Inspired by actual events that transpired following the suicide of a local priest, Deery dresses his nicely shot drama from Little Wing Films in the guise of a theological thriller, and though the first-time filmmaker treats the subject matter with an occasionally heavy hand, his strong cast and clearly heartfelt intentions help smooth over some of those uneven passages.
At first, the back-to-back incidents involving the suicide of parish priest Father Frank Sweeney (Patrick Lynch) and the expulsion of earnest seminary student Daniel McLaughlin (Jonathan Forbes) based on the incorrect assumption that he was behaving inappropriately with another male colleague would appear unrelated.
But a intrepid journalist (Jason Barry) believing otherwise soon gets to the heart of a suspected hypocritical cover-up that is ripped wide open during a live TV debate on the topic of priests and celibacy.
Although the thriller aspect at times feels a bit forced, Deery otherwise achieves a refreshing naturalism in a milieu that's too often distinguished by flickering candlelight and hushed voices. The fact that many of his lively characters curse a blue streak while engaging in heated arguments gives the film an immediacy and a pertinence absent in many productions dealing with similar subject matter.
Forbes brings a palpable conviction to his role of the young man who's as committed to the priesthood as he is to the young woman he loves (Catherine Walker), while the familiar faces belonging to Brenda Fricker as Forbes' mom, Hugh Bonneville as a sympathetic seminarian and John Lynch as an openly gay priest who has left the church further elevate the picture's profile.
While films about priests behaving badly aren't exactly in short supply these days, Irish writer-director John Deery weighs in with a challenging, thought-provoking debut that compassionately questions the relevance of celibacy in the Catholic Church.
Inspired by actual events that transpired following the suicide of a local priest, Deery dresses his nicely shot drama from Little Wing Films in the guise of a theological thriller, and though the first-time filmmaker treats the subject matter with an occasionally heavy hand, his strong cast and clearly heartfelt intentions help smooth over some of those uneven passages.
At first, the back-to-back incidents involving the suicide of parish priest Father Frank Sweeney (Patrick Lynch) and the expulsion of earnest seminary student Daniel McLaughlin (Jonathan Forbes) based on the incorrect assumption that he was behaving inappropriately with another male colleague would appear unrelated.
But a intrepid journalist (Jason Barry) believing otherwise soon gets to the heart of a suspected hypocritical cover-up that is ripped wide open during a live TV debate on the topic of priests and celibacy.
Although the thriller aspect at times feels a bit forced, Deery otherwise achieves a refreshing naturalism in a milieu that's too often distinguished by flickering candlelight and hushed voices. The fact that many of his lively characters curse a blue streak while engaging in heated arguments gives the film an immediacy and a pertinence absent in many productions dealing with similar subject matter.
Forbes brings a palpable conviction to his role of the young man who's as committed to the priesthood as he is to the young woman he loves (Catherine Walker), while the familiar faces belonging to Brenda Fricker as Forbes' mom, Hugh Bonneville as a sympathetic seminarian and John Lynch as an openly gay priest who has left the church further elevate the picture's profile.
AFI Fest
While films about priests behaving badly aren't exactly in short supply these days, Irish writer-director John Deery weighs in with a challenging, thought-provoking debut that compassionately questions the relevance of celibacy in the Catholic Church.
Inspired by actual events that transpired following the suicide of a local priest, Deery dresses his nicely shot drama from Little Wing Films in the guise of a theological thriller, and though the first-time filmmaker treats the subject matter with an occasionally heavy hand, his strong cast and clearly heartfelt intentions help smooth over some of those uneven passages.
At first, the back-to-back incidents involving the suicide of parish priest Father Frank Sweeney (Patrick Lynch) and the expulsion of earnest seminary student Daniel McLaughlin (Jonathan Forbes) based on the incorrect assumption that he was behaving inappropriately with another male colleague would appear unrelated.
But a intrepid journalist (Jason Barry) believing otherwise soon gets to the heart of a suspected hypocritical cover-up that is ripped wide open during a live TV debate on the topic of priests and celibacy.
Although the thriller aspect at times feels a bit forced, Deery otherwise achieves a refreshing naturalism in a milieu that's too often distinguished by flickering candlelight and hushed voices. The fact that many of his lively characters curse a blue streak while engaging in heated arguments gives the film an immediacy and a pertinence absent in many productions dealing with similar subject matter.
Forbes brings a palpable conviction to his role of the young man who's as committed to the priesthood as he is to the young woman he loves (Catherine Walker), while the familiar faces belonging to Brenda Fricker as Forbes' mom, Hugh Bonneville as a sympathetic seminarian and John Lynch as an openly gay priest who has left the church further elevate the picture's profile.
While films about priests behaving badly aren't exactly in short supply these days, Irish writer-director John Deery weighs in with a challenging, thought-provoking debut that compassionately questions the relevance of celibacy in the Catholic Church.
Inspired by actual events that transpired following the suicide of a local priest, Deery dresses his nicely shot drama from Little Wing Films in the guise of a theological thriller, and though the first-time filmmaker treats the subject matter with an occasionally heavy hand, his strong cast and clearly heartfelt intentions help smooth over some of those uneven passages.
At first, the back-to-back incidents involving the suicide of parish priest Father Frank Sweeney (Patrick Lynch) and the expulsion of earnest seminary student Daniel McLaughlin (Jonathan Forbes) based on the incorrect assumption that he was behaving inappropriately with another male colleague would appear unrelated.
But a intrepid journalist (Jason Barry) believing otherwise soon gets to the heart of a suspected hypocritical cover-up that is ripped wide open during a live TV debate on the topic of priests and celibacy.
Although the thriller aspect at times feels a bit forced, Deery otherwise achieves a refreshing naturalism in a milieu that's too often distinguished by flickering candlelight and hushed voices. The fact that many of his lively characters curse a blue streak while engaging in heated arguments gives the film an immediacy and a pertinence absent in many productions dealing with similar subject matter.
Forbes brings a palpable conviction to his role of the young man who's as committed to the priesthood as he is to the young woman he loves (Catherine Walker), while the familiar faces belonging to Brenda Fricker as Forbes' mom, Hugh Bonneville as a sympathetic seminarian and John Lynch as an openly gay priest who has left the church further elevate the picture's profile.
- 11/11/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.