Spain’s Madrid region is riding the crest of a wave towards becoming one of the most important animation/VFX hubs in Europe.
Taking in the country’s capital, the Madrid region hosts more than 32 of Spain’s active audiovisual companies and around 31 of its animation and VFX firms.
Regional animation and VFX players – structured around Pixel Cluster Madrid – scored last year a net revenue of €72.6 million (72.6 million) and generated 1,855 jobs.
“Animation and video games are strategic sectors within the economy of Madrid,” says Ignacio Carballo, head of audiovisual industries in the Madrid region. “They are elements of the future, dynamizers.”
The region is proving the cradle of high-profile toon productions reaping international recognition, an increasing trend in recent years.
Its importance is proved by several standout moves, often related with animated films:
*With its third instalment, “Tad The Lost Explorer. The Emerald Tablet,” currently dominating Spanish box office, the “Tad” saga,...
Taking in the country’s capital, the Madrid region hosts more than 32 of Spain’s active audiovisual companies and around 31 of its animation and VFX firms.
Regional animation and VFX players – structured around Pixel Cluster Madrid – scored last year a net revenue of €72.6 million (72.6 million) and generated 1,855 jobs.
“Animation and video games are strategic sectors within the economy of Madrid,” says Ignacio Carballo, head of audiovisual industries in the Madrid region. “They are elements of the future, dynamizers.”
The region is proving the cradle of high-profile toon productions reaping international recognition, an increasing trend in recent years.
Its importance is proved by several standout moves, often related with animated films:
*With its third instalment, “Tad The Lost Explorer. The Emerald Tablet,” currently dominating Spanish box office, the “Tad” saga,...
- 9/21/2022
- by Emiliano De Pablos
- Variety Film + TV
It has been announced that Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and The Witness are coming to Ps Plus this March, but that means no more PS3 or Vita Games!
The Ps Plus game library just got a bit larger with the addition of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and The Witness. This month marks the first time since the launch of the PS4 that Ps Plus will not feature PS3 or Ps Vita games. This was announced to happen sometime ago, but I feel this is a disadvantage for Playstation.
Xbox not only has Xbox Games Pass, it also have Xbox Games With Gold, which this month features games like Adventure Time: Pirates of the Enchiridion,Plants vs Zombies Garden Warfare 2, Star Wars: Republic Commando, and Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance. Just those 4 games stretch across all Xbox games consoles, so why did Sony decided to stop?
From what they have said in the past,...
The Ps Plus game library just got a bit larger with the addition of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare and The Witness. This month marks the first time since the launch of the PS4 that Ps Plus will not feature PS3 or Ps Vita games. This was announced to happen sometime ago, but I feel this is a disadvantage for Playstation.
Xbox not only has Xbox Games Pass, it also have Xbox Games With Gold, which this month features games like Adventure Time: Pirates of the Enchiridion,Plants vs Zombies Garden Warfare 2, Star Wars: Republic Commando, and Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance. Just those 4 games stretch across all Xbox games consoles, so why did Sony decided to stop?
From what they have said in the past,...
- 2/27/2019
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Boltz)
- Cinelinx
South Korean spy films have almost exclusively been action fares: an undercover agent from the North is stuck in the South or vice versa or agents from both agencies work together for a common end with lots of big action set pieces and hand-to-hand combats. This makes director Yoong Jong-bin’s latest film “The Spy Gone North” quite a unique effort, in that it draws inspiration from a real-life operation in South Korean covert operations history, to gives us a solid espionage thriller in the real sense.
“The Spy Gone North” is screening at the International Film Festival Rotterdam
It’s 1993. News of the North establishing reactor plants capable of manufacturing nuclear weaponry have worried the power structures in South Korea, which leads the National Intelligence Agency, spearheaded by Director Choi Hak-seong, to put in place a spy to find out more about the status of these rumoured plants. Enter Park Suk-young,...
“The Spy Gone North” is screening at the International Film Festival Rotterdam
It’s 1993. News of the North establishing reactor plants capable of manufacturing nuclear weaponry have worried the power structures in South Korea, which leads the National Intelligence Agency, spearheaded by Director Choi Hak-seong, to put in place a spy to find out more about the status of these rumoured plants. Enter Park Suk-young,...
- 2/1/2019
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
Not to be confused with the thriller “The Witness” which released earlier this year starring the excellent Lee Sung-min, director Lee Han’s newest film takes a more dramatic approach to the story of a witness to a crime.
Synopsis
Soon-ho is a poor lawyer who takes on the case to defend a suspect in a murder case. While working on the case, Soon-Ho meets Ji-woo, who is the only witness in the murder case and she has autism.
After the lukewarm response to tentpole blockbuster “Illang: The Wolf Brigade”, Jung Woo-sung is back as Soon-ho. This will be his first drama since 2016’s “Remember You”. Fresh from the trials of hell in both the “Along With the Gods” films as well as a critically-appreciated turn in indie hit “Youngju”, Kim Hyang-gi joins Jung Woo-sung as Ji-woo, which might be her most artistically challenging role to date. This is the...
Synopsis
Soon-ho is a poor lawyer who takes on the case to defend a suspect in a murder case. While working on the case, Soon-Ho meets Ji-woo, who is the only witness in the murder case and she has autism.
After the lukewarm response to tentpole blockbuster “Illang: The Wolf Brigade”, Jung Woo-sung is back as Soon-ho. This will be his first drama since 2016’s “Remember You”. Fresh from the trials of hell in both the “Along With the Gods” films as well as a critically-appreciated turn in indie hit “Youngju”, Kim Hyang-gi joins Jung Woo-sung as Ji-woo, which might be her most artistically challenging role to date. This is the...
- 1/4/2019
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
Movie conglomerate Lotte Cultureworks is poised to become South Korea’s leading distributor for the first time in 15 years. The company is expected to overtake Cj Entertainment, which has dominated distribution in the world’s fifth largest theatrical market since 2003.
Lotte’s rise back to the top was driven by its own “Along With the Gods” franchise and, as Paramount’s sub-distributor in Korea, by the blockbuster performance of “Mission: Impossible – Fallout,” which earned $50.3 million.
According to the Korean Film Council’s data service, Lotte distributed 14 films, including both local and foreign titles, between January and November. They generated total revenue of $260 million and accounted for 18.1% of the total box office during that period, putting Lotte ahead of Walt Disney Korea and Cj Entertainment. Cj had a 12.2% share through the end of November, earned from 15 releases.
The performance is a huge fillip for Lotte Cultureworks, which was previously known as Lotte Entertainment.
Lotte’s rise back to the top was driven by its own “Along With the Gods” franchise and, as Paramount’s sub-distributor in Korea, by the blockbuster performance of “Mission: Impossible – Fallout,” which earned $50.3 million.
According to the Korean Film Council’s data service, Lotte distributed 14 films, including both local and foreign titles, between January and November. They generated total revenue of $260 million and accounted for 18.1% of the total box office during that period, putting Lotte ahead of Walt Disney Korea and Cj Entertainment. Cj had a 12.2% share through the end of November, earned from 15 releases.
The performance is a huge fillip for Lotte Cultureworks, which was previously known as Lotte Entertainment.
- 12/28/2018
- by Sonia Kil and Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
Matthew Byrd Dec 7, 2018
The No Man's Sky team returns with The Last Campfire.
No Man's Sky developer Hello Games revealed their next project, The Last Campfire, during the 2018 Game Awards.
It seems like this game is really just a passion project for a few of the people working within Hello Games. That would seem to suggest that quite a few people are still working on updates to No Man's Sky. Regardless, the few people that are working on this game have certainly created something intriguing.
The Last Campfire tells the story of an ember that has found itself in a strange place full of mystery and danger. It doesn't know how it got where it is or who it is going to get back home. That nature of the game's story means that the developers aren't exactly sharing every detail of the title's plot and premise. That makes it a...
The No Man's Sky team returns with The Last Campfire.
No Man's Sky developer Hello Games revealed their next project, The Last Campfire, during the 2018 Game Awards.
It seems like this game is really just a passion project for a few of the people working within Hello Games. That would seem to suggest that quite a few people are still working on updates to No Man's Sky. Regardless, the few people that are working on this game have certainly created something intriguing.
The Last Campfire tells the story of an ember that has found itself in a strange place full of mystery and danger. It doesn't know how it got where it is or who it is going to get back home. That nature of the game's story means that the developers aren't exactly sharing every detail of the title's plot and premise. That makes it a...
- 12/7/2018
- Den of Geek
A new Song Kang-ho film is quite the event in South Korean cinema. Possibly the country’s biggest superstar, and one of the best known South Korean actors around the world, Song Kang-ho is known to star in massive hits and his films are often South Korea’s official entries to the Academy Awards for the Best Foreign Language category. So when he teams up with “Inside Men” director Woo Min-ho and Bae Doona, one of South Korea’s best actresses and Song Kang-ho’s co-star from “The Host”, big things are expected from the resulting collaboration “The Drug King”.
Synopsis
Set in Busan, South Korea during the 1970’s, Lee Doo-Sam builds an empire as a drug smuggler in the Busan underworld, while public prosecutor Kim In-goo attempts to take down Lee Doo-Sam.
Joining Song Kang-ho and Bae Donna is a strong supporting cast of Jo Jung-suk, who also starred...
Synopsis
Set in Busan, South Korea during the 1970’s, Lee Doo-Sam builds an empire as a drug smuggler in the Busan underworld, while public prosecutor Kim In-goo attempts to take down Lee Doo-Sam.
Joining Song Kang-ho and Bae Donna is a strong supporting cast of Jo Jung-suk, who also starred...
- 11/14/2018
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
Not a year goes by without South Korea releasing a serial killer movie, even if in the recent years the better entries in the genre have been few and far inbetween. “The Witness”, by director Jo Kyu-jang, is one of the better films of the genre to come out of the country, albeit for slightly different reasons, featuring strong performances and an engaging storyline.
The Witness is screening at London Korean Film Festival
Sang-hoon is a hard-working everyman who has moved into an apartment in a good neighbourhood with his wife and daughter. Late one night, when he returns home drunk after treating his colleagues to drinks, he hears screams outside the apartment building. When he goes to the window to see what the commotion is, he witnesses the brutal bludgeoning to death of a woman at the hands of a man. Sudden movement in the house causes the lights...
The Witness is screening at London Korean Film Festival
Sang-hoon is a hard-working everyman who has moved into an apartment in a good neighbourhood with his wife and daughter. Late one night, when he returns home drunk after treating his colleagues to drinks, he hears screams outside the apartment building. When he goes to the window to see what the commotion is, he witnesses the brutal bludgeoning to death of a woman at the hands of a man. Sudden movement in the house causes the lights...
- 11/8/2018
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
Leading Korean studio Lotte Entertainment will produce a Korean-language remake of Mexican comedy blockbuster “Instructions Not Included.” The group has partnered with Lionsgate-affiliated Globalgate Entertainment, which is developing local-language versions of the Eugenio Derbez-directed picture.
“In addition to distribution rights, our sales and acquisitions businesses, we also see the growing importance of remake deals and international co-productions,” said Justin Choi, Gm of Lotte’s international marketing and distribution department. “The demand is growing.”
After a couple of years in a slump, Lotte has returned to the forefront of Korean cinema, propelled by the sensational pan-Asian success of “Along With the Gods: The Two Words” in 2017. Its simultaneously produced sequel, “Along With the Gods: The Last 49 Days,” was also huge hit this year. It earned $90.8 million in Korea alone.
The company unveiled its 2019 lineup at an event on the margins of the Busan International Film Festival this week,...
“In addition to distribution rights, our sales and acquisitions businesses, we also see the growing importance of remake deals and international co-productions,” said Justin Choi, Gm of Lotte’s international marketing and distribution department. “The demand is growing.”
After a couple of years in a slump, Lotte has returned to the forefront of Korean cinema, propelled by the sensational pan-Asian success of “Along With the Gods: The Two Words” in 2017. Its simultaneously produced sequel, “Along With the Gods: The Last 49 Days,” was also huge hit this year. It earned $90.8 million in Korea alone.
The company unveiled its 2019 lineup at an event on the margins of the Busan International Film Festival this week,...
- 10/7/2018
- by Sonia Kil
- Variety Film + TV
China’s online entertainment service company iQIYI is giving a sales push to its inhouse productions at Busan’s Asian Film Market. It is the company’s third year at the Busan film market as a sales agent.
Titles include romantic comedy “Atm,” Vincent Zhao’s latest martial arts actioner “Warriors of the Nation” and animated feature “Spycies,” for which it launched sales at Cannes in May.
Directed by Zha Mu-chun, “Atm” is a Chinese-language adaptation of the 2012 Thai blockbuster “Atm: Er Rak Error.” Starring Zhu Ya-wen (“The Witness”) and Taiwanese actress Sandrine Pinna (“Touch of the Light”), “Atm” is set to be released in the first quarter of 2019.
“Warriors” is a story about Wong Fei-hung, a martial artist and folk hero of Cantonese ethnicity. Martial artist Vincent Zhao, who is best-known for his role as Wong in “Once Upon a Time in America,” plays Wong again in “Warriors.” The...
Titles include romantic comedy “Atm,” Vincent Zhao’s latest martial arts actioner “Warriors of the Nation” and animated feature “Spycies,” for which it launched sales at Cannes in May.
Directed by Zha Mu-chun, “Atm” is a Chinese-language adaptation of the 2012 Thai blockbuster “Atm: Er Rak Error.” Starring Zhu Ya-wen (“The Witness”) and Taiwanese actress Sandrine Pinna (“Touch of the Light”), “Atm” is set to be released in the first quarter of 2019.
“Warriors” is a story about Wong Fei-hung, a martial artist and folk hero of Cantonese ethnicity. Martial artist Vincent Zhao, who is best-known for his role as Wong in “Once Upon a Time in America,” plays Wong again in “Warriors.” The...
- 10/6/2018
- by Carole Horst
- Variety Film + TV
Local romantic drama, “On Your Wedding Day” remained on top of the South Korean box office. The Megabox release earned $4.5 million from 568,000 admissions between Friday and Sunday for a total of $14.7 million after two weekends.
Released on Wednesday, American thriller “Searching” landed in second. Starring Korean-American actor John Cho, the Sony release earned $4.4 million. Opening the same day, Korean drama “High Society” debuted in third place. The Lotte Entertainment release earned $3.75 million from 509,000 admissions over five days. Directed by Byun Hyuk the film tells the story of a married couple who try to climb the social ladder. The top three films together accounted for 70% of total weekend box office.
Another Lotte release, “Along with the Gods: The Last 49 Days” remained in fourth. The fantasy drama earned $896,000 to extend its total to $91.0 million after five weekends on release. Next Entertainment World’s crime thriller “The Witness” incurred a week-on-week drop of 77% and slipped to fifth.
Released on Wednesday, American thriller “Searching” landed in second. Starring Korean-American actor John Cho, the Sony release earned $4.4 million. Opening the same day, Korean drama “High Society” debuted in third place. The Lotte Entertainment release earned $3.75 million from 509,000 admissions over five days. Directed by Byun Hyuk the film tells the story of a married couple who try to climb the social ladder. The top three films together accounted for 70% of total weekend box office.
Another Lotte release, “Along with the Gods: The Last 49 Days” remained in fourth. The fantasy drama earned $896,000 to extend its total to $91.0 million after five weekends on release. Next Entertainment World’s crime thriller “The Witness” incurred a week-on-week drop of 77% and slipped to fifth.
- 9/3/2018
- by Sonia Kil
- Variety Film + TV
Korean romantic drama “On Your Wedding Day” landed on top of the South Korean box office. That helped local titles remain strong and account for more than 75% of the total weekend box office.
Opening on Wednesday, “Wedding Day” earned $7.06 million from 901,000 admissions between Wednesday and Sunday. Featuring young stars Park Bo-young (“Collective Invention”) and Kim Young-kwang (“Hot Young Bloods”), the Megabox release tells the story of a ten-year romance and friendship from the youngsters’ teenage years.
Crime thriller “The Witness” slipped to second. The Next Entertainment World release earned $3.53 million between Friday and Sunday for a total of $17.1 million after two weekends on release. Cj Entertainment’s “The Spy Gone North” and Lotte Entertainment’s “Along with the Gods: The Last 49 Days” slipped to third to fourth places, respectively. “Spy Gone North” earned $2.6 million from between Friday and Sunday, to extend its total to $36.2 million after three weekends. 2018’s biggest title,...
Opening on Wednesday, “Wedding Day” earned $7.06 million from 901,000 admissions between Wednesday and Sunday. Featuring young stars Park Bo-young (“Collective Invention”) and Kim Young-kwang (“Hot Young Bloods”), the Megabox release tells the story of a ten-year romance and friendship from the youngsters’ teenage years.
Crime thriller “The Witness” slipped to second. The Next Entertainment World release earned $3.53 million between Friday and Sunday for a total of $17.1 million after two weekends on release. Cj Entertainment’s “The Spy Gone North” and Lotte Entertainment’s “Along with the Gods: The Last 49 Days” slipped to third to fourth places, respectively. “Spy Gone North” earned $2.6 million from between Friday and Sunday, to extend its total to $36.2 million after three weekends. 2018’s biggest title,...
- 8/27/2018
- by Sonia Kil
- Variety Film + TV
South Korean film The Witness has sold to multiple territories, including North America, where Well Go USA is set to handle the thriller for its late-August release, its local distributor New announced.
The film has sold to a total of 57 territories, including South America, Spain, Japan and Singapore/Malaysia. It is slated to hit theaters across North America, Australia and New Zealand later this month, before opening in Taiwan in September. A press release by New stated that it has also received many inquiries about foreign-language remakes.
The thriller debuted at No. 1 in the local box office on Aug....
The film has sold to a total of 57 territories, including South America, Spain, Japan and Singapore/Malaysia. It is slated to hit theaters across North America, Australia and New Zealand later this month, before opening in Taiwan in September. A press release by New stated that it has also received many inquiries about foreign-language remakes.
The thriller debuted at No. 1 in the local box office on Aug....
- 8/24/2018
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
South Korean film The Witness has sold to multiple territories, including North America, where Well Go USA is set to handle the thriller for its late-August release, its local distributor New announced.
The film has sold to a total of 57 territories, including South America, Spain, Japan and Singapore/Malaysia. It is slated to hit theaters across North America, Australia and New Zealand later this month, before opening in Taiwan in September. A press release by New stated that it has also received many inquiries about foreign-language remakes.
The thriller debuted at No. 1 in the local box office on Aug....
The film has sold to a total of 57 territories, including South America, Spain, Japan and Singapore/Malaysia. It is slated to hit theaters across North America, Australia and New Zealand later this month, before opening in Taiwan in September. A press release by New stated that it has also received many inquiries about foreign-language remakes.
The thriller debuted at No. 1 in the local box office on Aug....
- 8/24/2018
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
A trio of locally-made films — “The Witness,” “The Spy Gone North” and “Along with the Gods: The Last 49 Days” — took top three spots at the South Korean box office.
Opening on the National Liberation Day, crime thriller “Witness” debuted on top, beating the previous week’s winner, “49 Days.” The Next Entertainment World release earned $10.6 million from 1.37 million admissions between Wednesday and Sunday. Directed by Cho Kyu-hang, “Witness” revolves around a salaryman who watches a murder from the balcony of his apartment and struggles to protect his family from the murderer.
In second spot, Cj Entertainment’s “Spy” earned $6.3 million between Friday and Sunday for a running total of $31.1 million after two weekends on release. Lotte Entertainment’s “Along with the Gods” sequel “49 Days” earned $5.05 million for a three-weekend cumulative of $84.5 million from 11.32 million admissions. That makes “along With the Gods” the first Korean franchise where all parts have sold more than 10 million tickets.
Opening on the National Liberation Day, crime thriller “Witness” debuted on top, beating the previous week’s winner, “49 Days.” The Next Entertainment World release earned $10.6 million from 1.37 million admissions between Wednesday and Sunday. Directed by Cho Kyu-hang, “Witness” revolves around a salaryman who watches a murder from the balcony of his apartment and struggles to protect his family from the murderer.
In second spot, Cj Entertainment’s “Spy” earned $6.3 million between Friday and Sunday for a running total of $31.1 million after two weekends on release. Lotte Entertainment’s “Along with the Gods” sequel “49 Days” earned $5.05 million for a three-weekend cumulative of $84.5 million from 11.32 million admissions. That makes “along With the Gods” the first Korean franchise where all parts have sold more than 10 million tickets.
- 8/20/2018
- by Sonia Kil
- Variety Film + TV
Actor Lee Sung-min has had quite a year. After a leading role in the comedy “What A Man Wants” and an integral role in the upcoming spy thriller “The Spy Gone North“, he will next be seen starring in the thriller “The Witness”.
Synopsis
Sang-hoon, an average salary man lives in an apartment complex with his wife and child at the foot of the mountain. One night, he witnesses a crime scene through his living room window, and the killer also notices that he is being watched. Sang-hoon, despite the dilemma, decides to hide and neglect the fact that he had seen someone get murdered, but had done nothing. The killer, however, starts to search the apartment to find and eliminate his only witness of that night.
“The Witness”, which is directed by Jo Kyu-jang and also stars Kim Sang-ho, Jin Kyung and Kwak Si-yang in pivotal roles, is set...
Synopsis
Sang-hoon, an average salary man lives in an apartment complex with his wife and child at the foot of the mountain. One night, he witnesses a crime scene through his living room window, and the killer also notices that he is being watched. Sang-hoon, despite the dilemma, decides to hide and neglect the fact that he had seen someone get murdered, but had done nothing. The killer, however, starts to search the apartment to find and eliminate his only witness of that night.
“The Witness”, which is directed by Jo Kyu-jang and also stars Kim Sang-ho, Jin Kyung and Kwak Si-yang in pivotal roles, is set...
- 8/3/2018
- by Rhythm Zaveri
- AsianMoviePulse
Jonathan Blow, the indie game developer behind critically-acclaimed puzzle titles “Braid” and “The Witness,” is working on a new project and he showed footage of it during a recent talk at the Gamelab conference in Spain. Gamelab took place in June, but the video of Blow’s talk finally reached YouTube on Friday.
The unnamed project is inspired by a 1981 Japanese puzzle game called “Sokoban,” where the player must push boxes around a warehouse to get them into specific storage locations. Blow’s game uses a similar concept, but wraps it in a fantasy aesthetic. There’s a big crystal that needs moving and three characters with specific abilities, like a wizard who casts a teleport spell. There’s also an undo feature in case the player messes up.
Blow told Eurogamer in 2017 the project already contains 25 hours of gameplay, mostly comprised of short, one-room levels. “We haven’t really...
The unnamed project is inspired by a 1981 Japanese puzzle game called “Sokoban,” where the player must push boxes around a warehouse to get them into specific storage locations. Blow’s game uses a similar concept, but wraps it in a fantasy aesthetic. There’s a big crystal that needs moving and three characters with specific abilities, like a wizard who casts a teleport spell. There’s also an undo feature in case the player messes up.
Blow told Eurogamer in 2017 the project already contains 25 hours of gameplay, mostly comprised of short, one-room levels. “We haven’t really...
- 7/18/2018
- by Stefanie Fogel
- Variety Film + TV
There’s a weird, wonderful beauty to be found in a television show that just completed a four-season run in the era of “too much TV” and only exists thanks to a ’60s French art film. Technically, of course, the Syfy original series “12 Monkeys” is far more indebted to the 1995 film starring Bruce Willis and Madeline Stowe, but every episode includes a mention of the 1962 short “La Jeteé” in the final credits — and more importantly, echoed that basic weirdness in its very existence.
Keeping many of the same character names from the film, the show took the original premise — a man gets sent from the future to stop the spread of a deadly virus, with the help of a modern-day doctor — and warped itself with time loops, alternate universes, and crazy twists that required a conspiracy-board-level of attention to detail to understand, but was a lot of fun to follow.
Keeping many of the same character names from the film, the show took the original premise — a man gets sent from the future to stop the spread of a deadly virus, with the help of a modern-day doctor — and warped itself with time loops, alternate universes, and crazy twists that required a conspiracy-board-level of attention to detail to understand, but was a lot of fun to follow.
- 7/7/2018
- by Liz Shannon Miller
- Indiewire
Warning: This post contains major spoilers for Friday’s 12 Monkeys.
Mother shocker!
Friday’s batch of 12 Monkeys episodes led viewers to believe that James Cole’s mom was The Witness’ daughter Emma before revealing that the mystery mama was actually time-traveler Hannah (played by Brooke Williams)! Yes, Jones is Cole’s grandmother. Let that sink in for a moment.
The twist was set into motion when Jones sent her daughter Hannah to 2009 to gather information on Cole’s mom Marion Woods and to find out how she knew the legend. What she found was Emma living under the alias, leading...
Mother shocker!
Friday’s batch of 12 Monkeys episodes led viewers to believe that James Cole’s mom was The Witness’ daughter Emma before revealing that the mystery mama was actually time-traveler Hannah (played by Brooke Williams)! Yes, Jones is Cole’s grandmother. Let that sink in for a moment.
The twist was set into motion when Jones sent her daughter Hannah to 2009 to gather information on Cole’s mom Marion Woods and to find out how she knew the legend. What she found was Emma living under the alias, leading...
- 6/30/2018
- TVLine.com
12 Monkeys showrunner Terry Matalas has three words to sum up the show’s fourth and final season (premiering this Friday at 8/7c on Syfy): “epic, emotional and satisfying.”
“I’m excited for [viewers] to see how we wrap it up,” Matalas adds. “The two-hour finale is like a summer blockbuster. It’s like a giant movie. We’re going out with a bang.”
TVLine invited Matalas to preview the drama’s closing time-travel adventure, Cassie and Cole’s future, and much more. Plus: Watch an exclusive premiere video below, in which a member of the team… dies?!
Tvline | You knew...
“I’m excited for [viewers] to see how we wrap it up,” Matalas adds. “The two-hour finale is like a summer blockbuster. It’s like a giant movie. We’re going out with a bang.”
TVLine invited Matalas to preview the drama’s closing time-travel adventure, Cassie and Cole’s future, and much more. Plus: Watch an exclusive premiere video below, in which a member of the team… dies?!
Tvline | You knew...
- 6/14/2018
- TVLine.com
Warner Bros Interactive is coming to Origin Access! Find out what games you can expect to see in The Vault, right here!
Electronic Arts Inc. (Nasdaq: EA) today announced the addition of six Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment titles to Origin Access*, marking the first major publisher outside of EA to introduce titles to The Vault. Origin Access members can now play games from the hit Batman™: Arkham series and Lego® Batman series. In the coming weeks, more games will be joining The Vault including the award-winning indie title, The Witness, and a brand-new game, Out of the Park 19.
The new line-up of games entering The Vault will include:
Available now:
• Batman™: Arkham Asylum
• Batman™: Arkham City
• Batman™: Arkham Origins
• Lego® Batman
• Lego® Batman 2
• Lego® Batman 3
Coming soon:
• The Witness
• Out of the Park Baseball 19
• Lost Castle
• Bulletstorm – Lite
• Wasteland 2
For players who are not a member of Origin Access,...
Electronic Arts Inc. (Nasdaq: EA) today announced the addition of six Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment titles to Origin Access*, marking the first major publisher outside of EA to introduce titles to The Vault. Origin Access members can now play games from the hit Batman™: Arkham series and Lego® Batman series. In the coming weeks, more games will be joining The Vault including the award-winning indie title, The Witness, and a brand-new game, Out of the Park 19.
The new line-up of games entering The Vault will include:
Available now:
• Batman™: Arkham Asylum
• Batman™: Arkham City
• Batman™: Arkham Origins
• Lego® Batman
• Lego® Batman 2
• Lego® Batman 3
Coming soon:
• The Witness
• Out of the Park Baseball 19
• Lost Castle
• Bulletstorm – Lite
• Wasteland 2
For players who are not a member of Origin Access,...
- 3/9/2018
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Amber Hall)
- Cinelinx
Bill Genovese knows the story that took hold about his sister Kitty, whose early-morning stabbing murder on a New York City street in 1964 became a cultural touchstone with a shocking allegation: that 38 people in nearby apartments witnessed her stabbing and heard her anguished screams over a 30-minute period, but did nothing as her killer returned to stab her again and again.
But Bill also knows the story isn’t true.
“The ’38 witnesses’ story, I had always been somewhat suspect of, maybe naively, because I thought how could that be?” he tells People.
As a child who grew up in the Connecticut suburbs,...
But Bill also knows the story isn’t true.
“The ’38 witnesses’ story, I had always been somewhat suspect of, maybe naively, because I thought how could that be?” he tells People.
As a child who grew up in the Connecticut suburbs,...
- 1/23/2017
- by jefftruesdelltimeinc
- PEOPLE.com
Exclusive: David O Russell, Killer Films’ Christine Vachon & Pamela Koffler, and Rachael Horovitz will produce a narrative feature adaptation of The Witness, the James Solomon-directed documentary that is one of the 15 feature docus shortlisted for the Oscars. Solomon will write the screenplay. The Witness takes a close look at the 1964 murder of Kitty Genovese, an attack that shocked the city after The New York Times reported that 38 witnesses saw her being murdered or…...
- 1/9/2017
- Deadline
Every year, IndieWire looks beyond the countless top 10 lists written by critics to widen the field. We turn to friends and colleagues in the independent film community — programmers, distributors, publicists and others — to give them the opportunity to share their favorite films and other media from the past 12 months. We also invited them to share their resolutions and anticipated events for 2017.
The Best of 2016: IndieWire’s Year in Review Bible
Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival
I’m limiting my list to films that had Us and Canadian theatrical releases in 2016. I saw far more than 10 this year that I liked, but if I have to be brutal, I’ll limit it to the films that lifted me.
1. “Moonlight”
2. “Julieta”
3. “Toni Erdmann”
4. “Cemetery of Splendor”
5. “Arrival”
6. “Fences”
7. “13th”
8. “American Honey”
9. “Things to Come”
10. “Moana”
Michael Barker, Co-President, Sony Pictures Classics
“Now is the winter of our discontent.
The Best of 2016: IndieWire’s Year in Review Bible
Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival
I’m limiting my list to films that had Us and Canadian theatrical releases in 2016. I saw far more than 10 this year that I liked, but if I have to be brutal, I’ll limit it to the films that lifted me.
1. “Moonlight”
2. “Julieta”
3. “Toni Erdmann”
4. “Cemetery of Splendor”
5. “Arrival”
6. “Fences”
7. “13th”
8. “American Honey”
9. “Things to Come”
10. “Moana”
Michael Barker, Co-President, Sony Pictures Classics
“Now is the winter of our discontent.
- 12/30/2016
- by Eric Kohn
- Indiewire
The Academy documentary branch’s shortlist of 15 represents a diverse range of films from all over the world, representing strong political views as well as high artistry. However, this year also stands as the first HBO shutout in recent memory — perhaps because they didn’t campaign assertively.
Rivals PBS landed five, Independent Lens and Showtime three, Netflix two, and American Experience Films, Pov, A&E, Amazon Studios, and Espn each have one. Theatrical distributors Kino Lorber and Magnolia had two, with Sundance Selects, Sony Pictures Classics, Open Road, Janus Films, Film Rise, The Film Collaborative and The Orchard one.
But which will make the final five? Those screeners will eventually be sent to the entire Academy — who have more mainstream taste than this group of professional documentarians. For now, this more demanding group will winnow down the list.
Films on similar topics could knock each other out. For example, voters...
Rivals PBS landed five, Independent Lens and Showtime three, Netflix two, and American Experience Films, Pov, A&E, Amazon Studios, and Espn each have one. Theatrical distributors Kino Lorber and Magnolia had two, with Sundance Selects, Sony Pictures Classics, Open Road, Janus Films, Film Rise, The Film Collaborative and The Orchard one.
But which will make the final five? Those screeners will eventually be sent to the entire Academy — who have more mainstream taste than this group of professional documentarians. For now, this more demanding group will winnow down the list.
Films on similar topics could knock each other out. For example, voters...
- 12/6/2016
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
The Academy documentary branch’s shortlist of 15 represents a diverse range of films from all over the world, representing strong political views as well as high artistry. However, this year also stands as the first HBO shutout in recent memory — perhaps because they didn’t campaign assertively.
Rivals PBS landed five, Independent Lens and Showtime three, Netflix two, and American Experience Films, Pov, A&E, Amazon Studios, and Espn each have one. Theatrical distributors Kino Lorber and Magnolia had two, with Sundance Selects, Sony Pictures Classics, Open Road, Janus Films, Film Rise, The Film Collaborative and The Orchard one.
PBS films — 3 are Independent Lens (Tower, I Am Not Your Negro and The Witness), one is Pov (Cameraperson) and one is American Experience (Command And Control.)
best,
Mary Lugo
But which will make the final five? Those screeners will eventually be sent to the entire Academy — who have more mainstream taste...
Rivals PBS landed five, Independent Lens and Showtime three, Netflix two, and American Experience Films, Pov, A&E, Amazon Studios, and Espn each have one. Theatrical distributors Kino Lorber and Magnolia had two, with Sundance Selects, Sony Pictures Classics, Open Road, Janus Films, Film Rise, The Film Collaborative and The Orchard one.
PBS films — 3 are Independent Lens (Tower, I Am Not Your Negro and The Witness), one is Pov (Cameraperson) and one is American Experience (Command And Control.)
best,
Mary Lugo
But which will make the final five? Those screeners will eventually be sent to the entire Academy — who have more mainstream taste...
- 12/6/2016
- by Anne Thompson
- Indiewire
Los Angeles, CA (October 10, 2016) . The Broadcast Film Critics Association (Bfca) and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association (Btja) have announced the nominees for the inaugural Critics. Choice Documentary Awards. The winners will be presented their awards at a gala event on Thursday, November 3, 2016 at Bric, in Brooklyn, New York.
.It is an amazing time for documentaries, with the ever-increasing number of platforms enabling producers to reach enthusiastic and growing audiences for non-fiction storytelling,. said Bfca and Btja President Joey Berlin.
.This is clearly demonstrated in the depth and quality of our inaugural nominees. We have a wealth of brilliant creators who are bringing to light some of the most entertaining and illuminating stories being told today. Indeed, documentary filmmaking is modern investigative journalism. We look forward to celebrating all these fine and important achievements at the first Critics. Choice Documentary Awards gala on November 3rd..
13th, 30 For 30: O.J.: Made in America...
.It is an amazing time for documentaries, with the ever-increasing number of platforms enabling producers to reach enthusiastic and growing audiences for non-fiction storytelling,. said Bfca and Btja President Joey Berlin.
.This is clearly demonstrated in the depth and quality of our inaugural nominees. We have a wealth of brilliant creators who are bringing to light some of the most entertaining and illuminating stories being told today. Indeed, documentary filmmaking is modern investigative journalism. We look forward to celebrating all these fine and important achievements at the first Critics. Choice Documentary Awards gala on November 3rd..
13th, 30 For 30: O.J.: Made in America...
- 10/11/2016
- by Manny
- Manny the Movie Guy
The Broadcast Film Critics Association (Bfca) and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association (Btja) have announced the nominees for their inaugural Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards, taking place next month at a first-time gala event in Brooklyn, New York. Ava DuVernay’s “13th,” Ezra Edelman’s “O.J.: Made in America” and Clay Tweel’s “Gleason” lead the pack of nominees, with five nominations each. Other nominees include Kirsten Johnson’s “Cameraperson,” the gob-smacking “Weiner” and recent Netflix features “Amanda Knox” and “Audrie & Daisy.”
“It is an amazing time for documentaries, with the ever-increasing number of platforms enabling producers to reach enthusiastic and growing audiences for non-fiction storytelling,” said Bfca and Btja President Joey Berlin. “This is clearly demonstrated in the depth and quality of our inaugural nominees. We have a wealth of brilliant creators who are bringing to light some of the most entertaining and illuminating stories being told today. Indeed, documentary filmmaking is modern investigative journalism.
“It is an amazing time for documentaries, with the ever-increasing number of platforms enabling producers to reach enthusiastic and growing audiences for non-fiction storytelling,” said Bfca and Btja President Joey Berlin. “This is clearly demonstrated in the depth and quality of our inaugural nominees. We have a wealth of brilliant creators who are bringing to light some of the most entertaining and illuminating stories being told today. Indeed, documentary filmmaking is modern investigative journalism.
- 10/10/2016
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Every week, the CriticWire Survey asks a select handful of film and TV critics two questions and publishes the results on Monday morning. (The answer to the second, “What is the best film in theaters right now?” can be found at the end of this post.)
This week’s question: What was the best film of summer 2016?
Charles Bramesco (@intothecrevasse), Rolling Stone
Gosh, where to start! It’s been a banner summer if, like me, you enjoy submerging yourself in vast unending ocean of incomprehensible bullshit at the movies. There was “Suicide Squad,” which is to plot structure what the Elephant Man is to facial bone structure. Loved me some “X-Men: Apocalypse,” an epic battle between an uncomfortable-looking ensemble of interesting-to-talented actors and a script intent on turning them all into cardboard cutouts. “The Shallows” was fun in the way that completing the maze on the back of a cereal box is fun,...
This week’s question: What was the best film of summer 2016?
Charles Bramesco (@intothecrevasse), Rolling Stone
Gosh, where to start! It’s been a banner summer if, like me, you enjoy submerging yourself in vast unending ocean of incomprehensible bullshit at the movies. There was “Suicide Squad,” which is to plot structure what the Elephant Man is to facial bone structure. Loved me some “X-Men: Apocalypse,” an epic battle between an uncomfortable-looking ensemble of interesting-to-talented actors and a script intent on turning them all into cardboard cutouts. “The Shallows” was fun in the way that completing the maze on the back of a cereal box is fun,...
- 8/22/2016
- by David Ehrlich
- Indiewire
Specialty newcomers had mostly decent starts in the first weekend of June. FilmRise's doc The Witness technically had the weekend's highest overall per theater average in its exclusive engagement, grossing $15K, while Oscilloscope's feature The Fits, also in a single location, bowed with $11,300. Two foreign entries in their debuts really took the spotlight, though. India's A…Aa and Korea's The Wailing from BlueSky Cinemas and Well Go USA, respectively, opened at multiple…...
- 6/5/2016
- Deadline
While the true-crime story has been a topic of cinematic conversation for decades, true-crime documentaries have both become boundary pushing cinematically in the world of non-fiction filmmaking, and some of the most popular and talked about films of the last half decade. TV miniseries like The Jinx and feature films like those from director Joe Berlinger (such as White: United States Of America v. James J. BulgerThe Witness
From director James Solomon, The Witness looks at one of the most iconic true-crime stories, that of Kitty Genovese. On the night of March 13, 1964, Catherine “Kitty” Genovese was stabbed to death in Queens, New York, sparking a story that included 38 alleged witnesses who had seen or heard something only to stay silent. The film does give us details both about the actual attack and ultimately the coverage surrounding it, but the real narrative thread is woven by Kitty’s brother, Bill. With...
From director James Solomon, The Witness looks at one of the most iconic true-crime stories, that of Kitty Genovese. On the night of March 13, 1964, Catherine “Kitty” Genovese was stabbed to death in Queens, New York, sparking a story that included 38 alleged witnesses who had seen or heard something only to stay silent. The film does give us details both about the actual attack and ultimately the coverage surrounding it, but the real narrative thread is woven by Kitty’s brother, Bill. With...
- 6/4/2016
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
In 1964, 28-year-old Kitty Genovese was raped and murdered outside her apartment building in New York City. The New York Times made her a focus of national fascination when it reported that 38 of her neighbors had witnessed the crime and did nothing to help — not even calling the police — and she died alone. In the 50 years since, Genovese has become a hallmark of debate about urban apathy, a useful reference for any story to make as shorthand for what bastards people are, and the subject of numerous fictional adaptations of her story (the Law & Order franchise alone has done at least three episodes based on her case). At the same time, Genovese’s siblings have continued to nurse their hurt over their lost sister. In particular, her younger brother Bill openly admits to have never gotten over her death, and that this event has shaped large parts of his life.
The Witness...
The Witness...
- 6/2/2016
- by Daniel Schindel
- The Film Stage
More than 50 years ago, the murder of Kitty Genovese stunned the nation when 38 witnesses in nearby apartments witnessed her brutal stabbing and did nothing. The incident came to represent urban apathy and spawned the “bystander effect” theory. But The Witness, a gripping new documentary about Genovese’s murder, challenges our long-held beliefs about the case. The directorial debut of screenwriter James Solomon, The Witness had its world premiere at the 2015 New York Film Festival and will open theatrically at New York’s IFC Center on June 3, with a national rollout to follow. The multi-layered documentary investigates what actually happened on that fateful […]...
- 6/2/2016
- by Paula Bernstein
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
The Witness FilmRise Reviewed by: Harvey Karten, Shockya Grade: B Director: James Solomon Written by: William Genovese, Russell Greene, Gabriel Rhodes, James Solomon Screened at: Review 1, NYC, 4/21/16 Opens: June 3, 2016 Winston Moseley died in prison a few months ago at the age of 81, after serving 52 years behind bars (minus whatever days or hours he gained after breaking out). Ordinarily a person like him would receive not a single sentence in any respectable newspaper, but this vile sociopath, guilty of killing three women and raping at least two of them while they were dying, may have picked the wrong victim in Catherine “Kitty” Genovese. In 1964, [ Read More ]
The post The Witness Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post The Witness Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 5/29/2016
- by Harvey Karten
- ShockYa
If you’ve taken an introductory class in criminology or psychology, read Watchmen, or even watched this last season of Girls, you likely know the story of Kitty Genovese, a young Queens, New York resident who was raped outside her apartment complex on a normal night, screaming for help and receiving no help from the 38 witnesses who looked on — which would be quite a story if it was verifiably true. Yet the victim-onlooker mechanics of that situation are far more complicated than apathy of the most immediate and horrible kind; rather than being noted and built entirely from there, it requires investigation.
And so we have James Solomon‘s The Witness, a documentary about her brother, Bill Genovese, and his efforts to learn what happened. It earned fine notices from one fall-festival appearance to the other in 2015, with many critics saying it helped bring a greater understanding of the issue at hand.
And so we have James Solomon‘s The Witness, a documentary about her brother, Bill Genovese, and his efforts to learn what happened. It earned fine notices from one fall-festival appearance to the other in 2015, with many critics saying it helped bring a greater understanding of the issue at hand.
- 5/23/2016
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
Read More: The Kings of Queens: 'The Witness' and 'In Jackson Heights' Examine a New York Borough, Then and Now On March 13, 1964, Catherine "Kitty" Genovese was stabbed to death right outside her apartment complex in Queens, New York. It was later reported that there were 38 witnesses to her murder, but none chose to intervene. The new documentary "The Witness" explores the murky details around her death and the subsequent investigation, and it has just been acquired by FilmRise. The directorial debut of screenwriter James Solomon, "The Witness" details the horrific incident, its aftermath, and Kitty’s brother's arduous journey to bring her murderer to justice. “This film is not only an unraveling of what really happened that fateful night, but also about a brother’s relentless quest to reclaim his sister Kitty’s life from her death, "said Solomon. “I am thrilled that FilmRise will be bringing to...
- 1/21/2016
- by Mike Lown
- Indiewire
Plus: Glass Eye Pix, Dogfish wrap ‘Like Me’; FilmRise acquires ‘The Witness’; and more…
Professional dancer Krystal Ellswort, rising South Indian star Amitash Pradhan, Paul McGillion and Daphne Zuniga have joined Myriad Pictures, Das Films and Bowery Hills Entertainment’s Heartbeats. Myriad will handle sales in Berlin.
Writer-director Duane Adler has begun production in Mumbai on the tale of a feisty female American hip hop dancer who travels with her family to India and falls in love with a young man and a new style of dance.
Justin Chon, Salman Yussuf Khan, Kishori Shahane and Mohan Kapur round out the cast. Producers are Sriram Das, Andrea Chung and Karine Martin. Myriad’s Kirk D’Amico serves as executive producer alongside Julie Stadler and CEO Brian Williams of co-financier Dance Network.
Glass Eye Pix and Dogfish Pictures have wrapped principal photography on Like Me, a neo-noir starring Addison Timlin as a discontented loner who documents her crime spree through...
Professional dancer Krystal Ellswort, rising South Indian star Amitash Pradhan, Paul McGillion and Daphne Zuniga have joined Myriad Pictures, Das Films and Bowery Hills Entertainment’s Heartbeats. Myriad will handle sales in Berlin.
Writer-director Duane Adler has begun production in Mumbai on the tale of a feisty female American hip hop dancer who travels with her family to India and falls in love with a young man and a new style of dance.
Justin Chon, Salman Yussuf Khan, Kishori Shahane and Mohan Kapur round out the cast. Producers are Sriram Das, Andrea Chung and Karine Martin. Myriad’s Kirk D’Amico serves as executive producer alongside Julie Stadler and CEO Brian Williams of co-financier Dance Network.
Glass Eye Pix and Dogfish Pictures have wrapped principal photography on Like Me, a neo-noir starring Addison Timlin as a discontented loner who documents her crime spree through...
- 1/21/2016
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
It’s one of the most well-known murder cases in American history, and James Solomon’s reappraisal of it is fascinating and frustrating in equal measure
Between Peter Sarsgaard in Experimenter, Kyle Patrick Alvarez’s The Stanford Prison Experiment and now James Solomon’s documentary The Witness, shocking 20th-century revelations about man’s inhumanity are having quite the moment.
For decades, students have crossed their arms during introduction to sociology lectures and said: “I would never do that.” They said it when Stanley Milgram’s experiments suggested ingrained obedience to authority could lead anyone to commit Nazi atrocities. They said it when the Stanford Prison Experiment suggested even a mock institutional setting could spark brutal, fascist torment. And they said it when learning of the Kitty Genovese murder, in which a young woman was stabbed in the middle of the night as 37 witnesses sat in the safety of their apartments...
Between Peter Sarsgaard in Experimenter, Kyle Patrick Alvarez’s The Stanford Prison Experiment and now James Solomon’s documentary The Witness, shocking 20th-century revelations about man’s inhumanity are having quite the moment.
For decades, students have crossed their arms during introduction to sociology lectures and said: “I would never do that.” They said it when Stanley Milgram’s experiments suggested ingrained obedience to authority could lead anyone to commit Nazi atrocities. They said it when the Stanford Prison Experiment suggested even a mock institutional setting could spark brutal, fascist torment. And they said it when learning of the Kitty Genovese murder, in which a young woman was stabbed in the middle of the night as 37 witnesses sat in the safety of their apartments...
- 9/29/2015
- by Jordan Hoffman
- The Guardian - Film News
The 53rd New York Film Festival’s Spotlight on Documentary launches on September 27 and features new work from Frederick Wiseman, Laura Poitras, Walter Salles and Joaquim Pinto.
Poitras, winner of this year’s best documentary Oscar for Citizenfour, will preview the Julian Assange series Asylum.
Wiseman’s 40th documentary feature In Jackson Heights (pictured) profiles the culturally diverse New York neighbourhood caught in the midst of economic development.
In Fish Tail, Pinto and husband Leonel document the artisanal work of small-scale fishermen in the Azorean island of Rabo de Peixe. Salles’ Jia Zhangke, A Guy From Fenyang profiles the Chinese director as he revisits his hometown.
Spotlight on Documentary line-up:
Everything Is Copy (USA), Jacob Bernstein
World Premiere
Field Of Vision: New Episodic Nonfiction (USA-Germany), Laura Poitras
World Premiere
Fish Tail (Rabo de Peixe) (Portugal), Joaquim Pinto and Nuno Leonel
North American premiere
Homeland (Iraq Year Zero) (Iraq-France), Abbas Fahdel,
Part 1: Before...
Poitras, winner of this year’s best documentary Oscar for Citizenfour, will preview the Julian Assange series Asylum.
Wiseman’s 40th documentary feature In Jackson Heights (pictured) profiles the culturally diverse New York neighbourhood caught in the midst of economic development.
In Fish Tail, Pinto and husband Leonel document the artisanal work of small-scale fishermen in the Azorean island of Rabo de Peixe. Salles’ Jia Zhangke, A Guy From Fenyang profiles the Chinese director as he revisits his hometown.
Spotlight on Documentary line-up:
Everything Is Copy (USA), Jacob Bernstein
World Premiere
Field Of Vision: New Episodic Nonfiction (USA-Germany), Laura Poitras
World Premiere
Fish Tail (Rabo de Peixe) (Portugal), Joaquim Pinto and Nuno Leonel
North American premiere
Homeland (Iraq Year Zero) (Iraq-France), Abbas Fahdel,
Part 1: Before...
- 8/24/2015
- by jeremykay67@gmail.com (Jeremy Kay)
- ScreenDaily
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