Six herds of bison (carrying the expression of a barfly at the end of a very long night), three foxes, two black bears and one wolf with a rabbit in his mouth. This is the account of all animals we saw on our 552-kilometer road trip across the Northwest Territories, looking for Larry Sole. Who is Larry Sole?
To answer that question I must take you back to the late eighties, to a time when Iron Maiden and Van Halen ruled, when the greatness of a man was measured by the vertical feathery grandness of his hair, and seizure-inducing magenta was the colour of everything. In this questionable moment in history, a gorgeous man named Richard Van Camp -- in the minus inhumane cold of Canada's north -- picked up a pen and started writing a novel about a skinny, self-deprecating headbanger named Larry Sole. It became an ode to the burning,...
To answer that question I must take you back to the late eighties, to a time when Iron Maiden and Van Halen ruled, when the greatness of a man was measured by the vertical feathery grandness of his hair, and seizure-inducing magenta was the colour of everything. In this questionable moment in history, a gorgeous man named Richard Van Camp -- in the minus inhumane cold of Canada's north -- picked up a pen and started writing a novel about a skinny, self-deprecating headbanger named Larry Sole. It became an ode to the burning,...
- 5/28/2013
- Moviefone
Six herds of bison (carrying the expression of a barfly at the end of a very long night), three foxes, two black bears and one wolf with a rabbit in his mouth. This is the account of all animals we saw on our 552-kilometer road trip across the Northwest Territories, looking for Larry Sole. Who is Larry Sole?
To answer that question I must take you back to the late eighties, to a time when Iron Maiden and Van Halen ruled, when the greatness of a man was measured by the vertical feathery grandness of his hair, and seizure-inducing magenta was the colour of everything. In this questionable moment in history, a gorgeous man named Richard Van Camp -- in the minus inhumane cold of Canada's north -- picked up a pen and started writing a novel about a skinny, self-deprecating headbanger named Larry Sole. It became an ode to the burning,...
To answer that question I must take you back to the late eighties, to a time when Iron Maiden and Van Halen ruled, when the greatness of a man was measured by the vertical feathery grandness of his hair, and seizure-inducing magenta was the colour of everything. In this questionable moment in history, a gorgeous man named Richard Van Camp -- in the minus inhumane cold of Canada's north -- picked up a pen and started writing a novel about a skinny, self-deprecating headbanger named Larry Sole. It became an ode to the burning,...
- 5/28/2013
- Moviefone
TORONTO -- A sitcom about Canadian Muslims called Little Mosque on the Prairie has been picked up by Canadian Broadcasting Corp., the pubcaster announced Monday. A spokesman said the show will be "respectful." The CBC has ordered eight episodes of the comedy about a fictional Muslim community in small-town Saskatchewan from its creator and writer, Zarqa Nawaz of Regina, Saskatchewan-based FUNdamentalist Films. CBC spokesman Jeff Keay said the comedy will debut in January and promised it will be a "warm, gently funny, respectful look at small-town Canada." Keay added that the Canadian satire was unlikely to provoke anger from Muslim Canadians, some of whom have been urging that their lives and community be reflected on Canadian TV. "It's fair to say this is a collaborative effort," he said.
- 10/2/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
TORONTO -- A sitcom about Canadian Muslims called Little Mosque on the Prairie has been picked up by Canadian Broadcasting Corp., the pubcaster announced Monday. A spokesman said the show will be "respectful." The CBC has ordered eight episodes of the comedy about a fictional Muslim community in small-town Saskatchewan from its creator and writer, Zarqa Nawaz of Regina, Saskatchewan-based FUNdamentalist Films. CBC spokesman Jeff Keay said the comedy will debut in January and promised it will be a "warm, gently funny, respectful look at small-town Canada." Keay added that the Canadian satire was unlikely to provoke anger from Muslim Canadians, some of whom have been urging that their lives and community be reflected on Canadian TV. "It's fair to say this is a collaborative effort," he said.
- 10/2/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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