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Stars: Victorya Brandart, Ignacyo Matynia, Mark Lobene, Jarred Harper, Louisa Bradshaw, Claire McClain, Joy Donze | Written and Directed by Hamza Zaman
Few things in one’s life inspire more joy and fear than childbirth and becoming a parent. Though probably not the fears that Marie faces at the start of The Institute. Snake-like arms and hands emerge from the walls of a cave and tear the fetus from her body.
It’s a nightmare born out of frustration. Marie and her husband Daniel have been trying to become parents but with no luck and it’s affecting their marriage and her mental health. And then Daniel stumbles across Dr. Arthur Lands (Mark Lobene) and his secluded fertility clinic which claims to offer a radical solution to their problem.
The online ad for the clinic extols all of its virtues without offering any actual facts. And the disclaimers for such minor...
Few things in one’s life inspire more joy and fear than childbirth and becoming a parent. Though probably not the fears that Marie faces at the start of The Institute. Snake-like arms and hands emerge from the walls of a cave and tear the fetus from her body.
It’s a nightmare born out of frustration. Marie and her husband Daniel have been trying to become parents but with no luck and it’s affecting their marriage and her mental health. And then Daniel stumbles across Dr. Arthur Lands (Mark Lobene) and his secluded fertility clinic which claims to offer a radical solution to their problem.
The online ad for the clinic extols all of its virtues without offering any actual facts. And the disclaimers for such minor...
- 3/21/2022
- by Jim Morazzini
- Nerdly
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Tango Shalom, where a female tango dancer (Dancing with the Stars champion Karina Smirnoff) invites an Orthodox Jewish Rabbi (Jos Laniado) to enter a televised dance competition, was an arthouse standout this weekend with a per screen average of over $4,000 at four theaters in New York and LA. The solid performance in a generally dour specialty market shows the power of older demos when they want to come out, nudged in this case by a targeted postcard mailing blitz, according to Atlas Distribution President Harmon Kaslow.
Tango Shalom is distributed worldwide by Vision Films with Atlas managing U.S. theatrical.
Kaslow thinks the comedy, directed by Gabriel Bologna with a sweet message and a star (Lainie Kazan) and producer (Joel Zwick) from the 2002 breakout hit My Big, Fat Greek Wedding, also benefitted from an exclusive theatrical run. Distributors have been noting the one-two boon of a decent window (60 days in...
Tango Shalom is distributed worldwide by Vision Films with Atlas managing U.S. theatrical.
Kaslow thinks the comedy, directed by Gabriel Bologna with a sweet message and a star (Lainie Kazan) and producer (Joel Zwick) from the 2002 breakout hit My Big, Fat Greek Wedding, also benefitted from an exclusive theatrical run. Distributors have been noting the one-two boon of a decent window (60 days in...
- 9/5/2021
- by Jill Goldsmith
- Deadline Film + TV
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