Exclusive: Ari Aster’s new A24 film Eddington has rounded out its cast with four additions: William Belleau (Killers of the Flower Moon), Cameron Mann (Mare of Easttown), Matt Gomez Hidaka (Silo), and Amélie Hoeferle (The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes).
The actors join a stacked ensemble led by Joaquin Phoenix, who reteams with Aster and A24 following their collaboration on surreal epic Beau Is Afraid, as previously reported. Additional cast includes Pedro Pascal, Emma Stone, Luke Grimes, Austin Butler, Deirdre O’Connell, Micheal Ward, and Clifton Collins Jr.
While the film’s plot is being guarded, it’s been discussed as a Western. Aster is directing from his own script and producing alongside Lars Knudsen under their Square Peg banner. Production on the film kicked off earlier this month.
Most recently seen playing Henry Roan, the first husband of Lily Gladstone’s Mollie, in Martin Scorsese’s...
The actors join a stacked ensemble led by Joaquin Phoenix, who reteams with Aster and A24 following their collaboration on surreal epic Beau Is Afraid, as previously reported. Additional cast includes Pedro Pascal, Emma Stone, Luke Grimes, Austin Butler, Deirdre O’Connell, Micheal Ward, and Clifton Collins Jr.
While the film’s plot is being guarded, it’s been discussed as a Western. Aster is directing from his own script and producing alongside Lars Knudsen under their Square Peg banner. Production on the film kicked off earlier this month.
Most recently seen playing Henry Roan, the first husband of Lily Gladstone’s Mollie, in Martin Scorsese’s...
- 3/21/2024
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit fans, we’ve got a fresh off the press preview for the new Season 25 Episode 4 episode titled Duty to Report!
Find out everything you need to know about the Duty to Report episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Duty to Report Season 25 Episode 4 Preview
In the upcoming episode of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” titled “Duty to Report,” set to air on NBC at 9:00 Pm on February 8, 2024, viewers can expect a gripping and emotionally charged storyline. This episode takes a deep dive into the complexities of sexual assault investigations within the context of a close-knit community.
The core of the episode revolves around Chief McGrath’s daughter, who bravely discloses a sexual assault. This revelation thrusts Olivia Benson, portrayed by the talented Mariska Hargitay,...
Find out everything you need to know about the Duty to Report episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Duty to Report Season 25 Episode 4 Preview
In the upcoming episode of “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit” titled “Duty to Report,” set to air on NBC at 9:00 Pm on February 8, 2024, viewers can expect a gripping and emotionally charged storyline. This episode takes a deep dive into the complexities of sexual assault investigations within the context of a close-knit community.
The core of the episode revolves around Chief McGrath’s daughter, who bravely discloses a sexual assault. This revelation thrusts Olivia Benson, portrayed by the talented Mariska Hargitay,...
- 2/1/2024
- by News
- TV Regular
Spoiler Alert: Do not read if you have not watched the series premiere of “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” streaming now on Amazon Prime Video.
After Alison (Madison Iseman) learns her twin sister Lennon (also Iseman) slept with the guy she has been in love with for years in the premiere episode of Amazon Prime Video’s “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” she just wants to leave their graduation party. Alison is emotionally distraught when she drives away, but also distracted by her sisters’ friends, who pile into the car, drunk and high. She may not have meant to hit something on a dark road, but when she gets out of the car and sees it is her sister, she agrees to dump the body — and then steals her identity and lives for the next year as Lennon.
Even if shock incapacitated Alison in the immediate aftermath of the accident,...
After Alison (Madison Iseman) learns her twin sister Lennon (also Iseman) slept with the guy she has been in love with for years in the premiere episode of Amazon Prime Video’s “I Know What You Did Last Summer,” she just wants to leave their graduation party. Alison is emotionally distraught when she drives away, but also distracted by her sisters’ friends, who pile into the car, drunk and high. She may not have meant to hit something on a dark road, but when she gets out of the car and sees it is her sister, she agrees to dump the body — and then steals her identity and lives for the next year as Lennon.
Even if shock incapacitated Alison in the immediate aftermath of the accident,...
- 10/16/2021
- by Danielle Turchiano
- Variety Film + TV
Emmys voters didn’t adore “WandaVision” as much as the rest of us did.
While the Disney Plus series from Marvel Studios took home three awards at the Creative Arts Emmys last weekend — for production, costume design and music — the action series was completely shut out of the Primetime Emmys, which were held in a tent in Los Angeles on Sunday night. Fans and critics alike loved the inventive show this past winter, in which Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) eventually faced her grief from losing Vision (Paul Bettany).
“WandaVision” winning no major awards Sunday night, after receiving 23 total nominations, proved to be the biggest snub of the show. The series was predicted to win at least two awards for acting: both Kathryn Hahn and Bettany were heavily tipped as favorites in their categories for limited series drama.
The biggest winners from Sunday’s show? “The Crown” and “The Queen’s Gambit,” which...
While the Disney Plus series from Marvel Studios took home three awards at the Creative Arts Emmys last weekend — for production, costume design and music — the action series was completely shut out of the Primetime Emmys, which were held in a tent in Los Angeles on Sunday night. Fans and critics alike loved the inventive show this past winter, in which Wanda (Elizabeth Olsen) eventually faced her grief from losing Vision (Paul Bettany).
“WandaVision” winning no major awards Sunday night, after receiving 23 total nominations, proved to be the biggest snub of the show. The series was predicted to win at least two awards for acting: both Kathryn Hahn and Bettany were heavily tipped as favorites in their categories for limited series drama.
The biggest winners from Sunday’s show? “The Crown” and “The Queen’s Gambit,” which...
- 9/20/2021
- by Kate Aurthur and Ramin Setoodeh
- Variety Film + TV
(Note: This article contains major plot spoilers for the finale episode.)
The HBO drama “Mare of Easttown” proved to be the ultimate in water-cooler murder mysteries, provoking endless fan theories about the identity of its main baddie, but has a show ever gotten as much buzz for its prop work? Memes proved ubiquitous highlighting Delco detective Mare Sheehan’s (Kate Winslet) boundless affection for hoagies, Cheez Whiz, good coffee and her treasured vape pen, but what made these items so indelible is that they genuinely created a sense of lived-in character (try to forget Jean Smart swiping her hand left and right on that Fruit Ninja game), and as proved in the final episode, a prop even proves to be the eureka moment for Mare finally cracking the unwieldy, tragedy-strewn murder case at the heart of the series.
Property master Susannah McCarthy is most pleased by this attention to her efforts.
The HBO drama “Mare of Easttown” proved to be the ultimate in water-cooler murder mysteries, provoking endless fan theories about the identity of its main baddie, but has a show ever gotten as much buzz for its prop work? Memes proved ubiquitous highlighting Delco detective Mare Sheehan’s (Kate Winslet) boundless affection for hoagies, Cheez Whiz, good coffee and her treasured vape pen, but what made these items so indelible is that they genuinely created a sense of lived-in character (try to forget Jean Smart swiping her hand left and right on that Fruit Ninja game), and as proved in the final episode, a prop even proves to be the eureka moment for Mare finally cracking the unwieldy, tragedy-strewn murder case at the heart of the series.
Property master Susannah McCarthy is most pleased by this attention to her efforts.
- 6/10/2021
- by Jason Clark
- The Wrap
On HBO’s smash hit limited series “Mare of Easttown,” Julianne Nicholson plays Lori Ross, the childhood friend of police detective Mare Sheehan (Kate Winslet). Lori becomes embroiled in the murder investigation of teen mom Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny), who is the daughter of her husband John’s (Joe Tippett) cousin Kenny (Patrick Murney). In our recent interview, this star of “Boardwalk Empire,” “Masters of Sex” and two series in the “Law & Order” franchise spoke about working with Winslet, her long-time friend, filming during the pandemic and keeping the killer’s identity secret. Spoilers ahead
Lori is shocked to learn that John had an affair with Erin and is the father of DJ, her hearing-impaired toddler. After he falsely confesses to Erin’s murder, John convinces Lori to look after DJ. But all is not as it seems. Nicholson spoke movingly about the water cooler moment in the finale...
Lori is shocked to learn that John had an affair with Erin and is the father of DJ, her hearing-impaired toddler. After he falsely confesses to Erin’s murder, John convinces Lori to look after DJ. But all is not as it seems. Nicholson spoke movingly about the water cooler moment in the finale...
- 6/10/2021
- by Paul Sheehan
- Gold Derby
Julianne Nicholson has crashed into the top 10 of the Best Limited/TV Movie Supporting Actress race. Prior to the “Mare of Easttown” finale on Sunday, Nicholson was in 12th place in the odds, but she has since risen to ninth place following her gut-wrenching performance in the highly anticipated closer that temporarily crashed HBO Max.
As Lori Ross, the best friend of thorny detective Mare Sheehan (Kate Winslet), Nicholson played a seemingly quiet role, a dutiful wife and mother whose world implodes in the finale when her 13-year-old son Ryan (Cameron Mann) is arrested for the murder of Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny). The revelation that Lori’s husband, John (Joe Tippett), a serial philanderer, had an affair with 17-year-old Erin, who’s also the daughter of his cousin Kenny (Patrick Murney), and fathered her hearing-impaired son, DJ, was only one of the blows Lori had to withstand in the emotionally charged episode.
As Lori Ross, the best friend of thorny detective Mare Sheehan (Kate Winslet), Nicholson played a seemingly quiet role, a dutiful wife and mother whose world implodes in the finale when her 13-year-old son Ryan (Cameron Mann) is arrested for the murder of Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny). The revelation that Lori’s husband, John (Joe Tippett), a serial philanderer, had an affair with 17-year-old Erin, who’s also the daughter of his cousin Kenny (Patrick Murney), and fathered her hearing-impaired son, DJ, was only one of the blows Lori had to withstand in the emotionally charged episode.
- 6/3/2021
- by Robert Rorke
- Gold Derby
(Warning: This post contains major spoilers through the finale of “Mare of Easttown”).
HBO’s Kate Winslet-led limited series “Mare of Easttown” concluded Sunday with a shocking finale that dropped more than one bombshell on the audience, including the identity of Erin McMenamin’s (Cailee Spaeny) killer.
The beginning of the hour led fans to believe that John Ross (Joe Tippett), the husband of Mare’s (Winslet) best friend, Lori (Julianne Nicholson), was the one who murdered Erin — his cousin’s daughter, with whom he was having an affair and secretly fathered a child. But that revelation was debunked towards the end of the episode, which saw Mare figure out the true culprit was Lori and John’s young son, Ryan (Cameron Mann), and John and Lori had lied about the crime to protect his family.
And the reason the preteen had killed Erin was because he thought he was protecting his family,...
HBO’s Kate Winslet-led limited series “Mare of Easttown” concluded Sunday with a shocking finale that dropped more than one bombshell on the audience, including the identity of Erin McMenamin’s (Cailee Spaeny) killer.
The beginning of the hour led fans to believe that John Ross (Joe Tippett), the husband of Mare’s (Winslet) best friend, Lori (Julianne Nicholson), was the one who murdered Erin — his cousin’s daughter, with whom he was having an affair and secretly fathered a child. But that revelation was debunked towards the end of the episode, which saw Mare figure out the true culprit was Lori and John’s young son, Ryan (Cameron Mann), and John and Lori had lied about the crime to protect his family.
And the reason the preteen had killed Erin was because he thought he was protecting his family,...
- 6/3/2021
- by Jennifer Maas
- The Wrap
Spoiler Alert: Do not read if you have not yet watched “Sacrament,” the series finale of “Mare of Easttown.”
HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” almost did not end with Mare (Kate Winslet) finally ascending into the attic, where her son died by suicide.
“We said, Does it feel like we’re doing two endings? Do we really need Mare going in the attic?” Winslet recalled during a live Instagram Q&a hosted by the network and moderated by Variety‘s senior artisans editor, Jazz Tangcay, on Tuesday.
Winslet, who executive produces the seven-part limited series in addition to starring in it, said she had conversations with creator Brad Ingelsby and director Craig Zobel about whether or not the show should just end at the powerful moment between her character and Lori (Julianne Nicholson). The team decided to shoot the scene and determine whether they would use it or not when they were in post.
HBO’s “Mare of Easttown” almost did not end with Mare (Kate Winslet) finally ascending into the attic, where her son died by suicide.
“We said, Does it feel like we’re doing two endings? Do we really need Mare going in the attic?” Winslet recalled during a live Instagram Q&a hosted by the network and moderated by Variety‘s senior artisans editor, Jazz Tangcay, on Tuesday.
Winslet, who executive produces the seven-part limited series in addition to starring in it, said she had conversations with creator Brad Ingelsby and director Craig Zobel about whether or not the show should just end at the powerful moment between her character and Lori (Julianne Nicholson). The team decided to shoot the scene and determine whether they would use it or not when they were in post.
- 6/2/2021
- by Jazz Tangcay
- Variety Film + TV
The final episode of Mare of Easttown limited series drew four million viewers over the holiday weekend across HBO and HBO Max, with nearly three million viewers Sunday night (all platforms), marking a series high for both linear and digital, according to HBO. The finale also set the record as the most watched episode of an Original Series on HBO Max during its first 24 hours of availability, besting the finales of recent hits The Undoing and The Flight Attendant over the same period of time.
Mare of Easttown also joins The Undoing as the only series in HBO’s history to see consecutive growth week-to-week. Viewership still is expected to grow further via additional telecasts and digital viewing.
Created by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Craig Zobel, the seven-part Easttown stars Kate Winslet as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.
Mare of Easttown also joins The Undoing as the only series in HBO’s history to see consecutive growth week-to-week. Viewership still is expected to grow further via additional telecasts and digital viewing.
Created by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Craig Zobel, the seven-part Easttown stars Kate Winslet as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.
- 6/1/2021
- by Denise Petski
- Deadline Film + TV
What a freakin' mess that has been made in Easttown. Mare of Easttown concluded on Sunday by explaining who actually killed Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny) and how, and then explaining it all over again. It was not, as everyone thought at the end of the last episode, Erin's cousin Billy Ross (Robbie Tann). It was also not, as everyone thought at the beginning of this episode, Erin's cousin John Ross (Joe Tippett), though he was the real father of Erin's baby. It was actually the young Ryan Ross (Cameron Mann), John's son, who shot Erin on accident while trying to prevent his family from breaking up again. He was just trying to scare her off with a gun, and it went off when she tried to get it away...
- 5/31/2021
- E! Online
This column contains spoilers for the finale of Mare of Easttown, available now on HBO and HBO Max.
For a show whose characters seemed congenitally incapable of smiling or experiencing joy, Mare of Easttown inspired a lot of amusing side discussions among its audience. There was the analysis of all the thick DelCo accents, with some viewers offering up their own versions. There were screencaps and GIFs of Kate Winslet as Mare eating hoagies and cheesesteaks and spray cheese, and loving tributes to Evan Peters making himself the King of...
For a show whose characters seemed congenitally incapable of smiling or experiencing joy, Mare of Easttown inspired a lot of amusing side discussions among its audience. There was the analysis of all the thick DelCo accents, with some viewers offering up their own versions. There were screencaps and GIFs of Kate Winslet as Mare eating hoagies and cheesesteaks and spray cheese, and loving tributes to Evan Peters making himself the King of...
- 5/31/2021
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Rollingstone.com
Spoiler Alert: Do not read if you have not yet watched “Sacrament,” the series finale of “Mare of Easttown.”
After watching the penultimate episode of HBO’s “Mare of Easttown,” during which Billy Ross (Robbie Tann) confessed to killing Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny), many audience members came away with even more questions, including that’s a fake-out, right?
The finale episode, entitled “Sacrament,” revealed that yes, there was much more to this story, including a much more expansive web of criminality than a first glance at the single mother’s murder appeared.
Billy seemed willing to go down for what he thought was his brother John’s (Joe Tippett) crime. But Erin’s friend Jess (Ruby Cruz) exposed a deeper truth to the police when she brought them a photo of John and Erin, who had engaged in a sexual relationship (despite the fact that she was a minor — and...
After watching the penultimate episode of HBO’s “Mare of Easttown,” during which Billy Ross (Robbie Tann) confessed to killing Erin McMenamin (Cailee Spaeny), many audience members came away with even more questions, including that’s a fake-out, right?
The finale episode, entitled “Sacrament,” revealed that yes, there was much more to this story, including a much more expansive web of criminality than a first glance at the single mother’s murder appeared.
Billy seemed willing to go down for what he thought was his brother John’s (Joe Tippett) crime. But Erin’s friend Jess (Ruby Cruz) exposed a deeper truth to the police when she brought them a photo of John and Erin, who had engaged in a sexual relationship (despite the fact that she was a minor — and...
- 5/31/2021
- by Danielle Turchiano
- Variety Film + TV
[Editor’s Note: The following review contains spoilers for “Mare of Easttown” Episode 7, “Sacrament,” including the ending.]
Two seemingly contradictory elements from the two loosely tied sides of “Mare of Easttown” found harmony in HBO’s buzzy crime drama. The first element is the red herrings, or as my editor begged me not to call them: the red mareings. Creator and writer Brad Inglesby absolutely littered his seven-part limited series with clues, many of which eventually proved misleading, in order to create an addictive whodunit for viewers at home. The second element, which runs very much in opposition to the first, is closure. If the audience feels too jerked around during their extended search for the killer, a murder-mystery is bound to fall apart, no matter how shocking the big reveal.
But the actual case is only one side of “Mare of Easttown,” and leading into the Episode 7 finale, closure had already started for our titular hero’s personal journey toward salvation.
Two seemingly contradictory elements from the two loosely tied sides of “Mare of Easttown” found harmony in HBO’s buzzy crime drama. The first element is the red herrings, or as my editor begged me not to call them: the red mareings. Creator and writer Brad Inglesby absolutely littered his seven-part limited series with clues, many of which eventually proved misleading, in order to create an addictive whodunit for viewers at home. The second element, which runs very much in opposition to the first, is closure. If the audience feels too jerked around during their extended search for the killer, a murder-mystery is bound to fall apart, no matter how shocking the big reveal.
But the actual case is only one side of “Mare of Easttown,” and leading into the Episode 7 finale, closure had already started for our titular hero’s personal journey toward salvation.
- 5/31/2021
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
Warning: contains spoilers for Mare of Easttown episodes 1-6.
Crime mystery dramas have various mechanisms for holding back essential witness information until a final episode. The coma trick – whereby a witness spends most of the series lying unresponsive in a hospital bed and then wakes up just in time to provide the penultimate episode cliff-hanger – is tried and tested. Another fix is to make the witness a criminal/adulterer/relapsing addict who stays quiet about what they know because it would also incriminate them. Alternatively, you could just make the key witness a person nobody would think to interrogate until the last moment, i.e. a kid.
That appears to be Mare of Easttown’s approach. Cameron Mann’s character Ryan, the son of Lori and John Ross, was a background presence until the series’ pivotal fifth episode. That’s when he exploded in the school cafeteria and attacked the...
Crime mystery dramas have various mechanisms for holding back essential witness information until a final episode. The coma trick – whereby a witness spends most of the series lying unresponsive in a hospital bed and then wakes up just in time to provide the penultimate episode cliff-hanger – is tried and tested. Another fix is to make the witness a criminal/adulterer/relapsing addict who stays quiet about what they know because it would also incriminate them. Alternatively, you could just make the key witness a person nobody would think to interrogate until the last moment, i.e. a kid.
That appears to be Mare of Easttown’s approach. Cameron Mann’s character Ryan, the son of Lori and John Ross, was a background presence until the series’ pivotal fifth episode. That’s when he exploded in the school cafeteria and attacked the...
- 5/25/2021
- by Louisa Mellor
- Den of Geek
Mare of Easttown Sore Must Be the Storm Plot Synopsis and Air Date — HBO‘s Mare of Easttown: Season 1, Episode 6: Sore Must Be the Storm plot synopsis and air date have been released. Crew Mare of Easttown stars Kate Winslet, Sosie Bacon, David Denman, Neal Huff, Izzy King, Cameron Mann, Patrick Murney, [...]
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown: Season 1, Episode 6: Sore Must Be the Storm Plot Synopsis & Air Date [HBO]...
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown: Season 1, Episode 6: Sore Must Be the Storm Plot Synopsis & Air Date [HBO]...
- 5/22/2021
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
The series premiere of the Kate Winslet-starring limited series Mare of Easttown drew 1 million viewers on Sunday across HBO and HBO Max, with the premium network saying it marked the second-best for a series debut on HBO Max behind last week’s strong numbers for The Nevers.
The Nevers, the Victorian science fiction drama series created and executive produced by Joss Whedon, drew just over 1.4 million viewers across linear telecasts and digital April 12.
Mare Of Easttown‘s start matched the premiere-night performances of HBO hits Succession and Euphoria in the 10 p.m. Sunday time slot, according to HBO on Monday.
Created by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Craig Zobel, the seven-part Easttown stars Winslet as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.
Julianne Nicholson, Jean Smart, Angourie Rice, Evan Peters, Guy Pearce, David Denman, Joe Tippett, Cailee Spaeny, John Douglas Thompson,...
The Nevers, the Victorian science fiction drama series created and executive produced by Joss Whedon, drew just over 1.4 million viewers across linear telecasts and digital April 12.
Mare Of Easttown‘s start matched the premiere-night performances of HBO hits Succession and Euphoria in the 10 p.m. Sunday time slot, according to HBO on Monday.
Created by Brad Ingelsby and directed by Craig Zobel, the seven-part Easttown stars Winslet as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.
Julianne Nicholson, Jean Smart, Angourie Rice, Evan Peters, Guy Pearce, David Denman, Joe Tippett, Cailee Spaeny, John Douglas Thompson,...
- 4/20/2021
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Mare of Easttown Trailer 2 — HBO has released the second TV mini-series trailer for Mare of Easttown (2021). View here the first Mare of Easttown trailer. Mare of Easttown trailer 2 stars Kate Winslet, Sosie Bacon, David Denman, Neal Huff, Izzy King, Cameron Mann, Patrick Murney, Cailee Spaeny, Jean [...]
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown Trailer 2: Detective Kate Winslet Investigates a Murder in a Small Pennsylvania Town [HBO]...
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown Trailer 2: Detective Kate Winslet Investigates a Murder in a Small Pennsylvania Town [HBO]...
- 4/6/2021
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
The release date for the Kate Winslet-led “Mare of Easttown” is drawing near. HBO released a new trailer on Wednesday for the limited series, which is set to premiere on the premium cabler April 18.
Per HBO, the series is an “exploration into the dark side of a close community and an authentic examination of how family and past tragedies can define our present. Winslet stars as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.”
The seven-part series is created by Brad Ingelsby (“The Way Back”), who returned to his home state of Pennsylvania to write the series, and all episodes were directed by Craig Zobel.
“Mare of Easttown” also stars Julianne Nicholson (“The Outsider”) as Lori Ross, Mare’s best friend since childhood; Jean Smart (HBO’s “Watchmen”) as Helen, Mare‘s mother; Angourie Rice (“Black Mirror”) as Siobhan Sheehan, Mare...
Per HBO, the series is an “exploration into the dark side of a close community and an authentic examination of how family and past tragedies can define our present. Winslet stars as Mare Sheehan, a small-town Pennsylvania detective who investigates a local murder as life crumbles around her.”
The seven-part series is created by Brad Ingelsby (“The Way Back”), who returned to his home state of Pennsylvania to write the series, and all episodes were directed by Craig Zobel.
“Mare of Easttown” also stars Julianne Nicholson (“The Outsider”) as Lori Ross, Mare’s best friend since childhood; Jean Smart (HBO’s “Watchmen”) as Helen, Mare‘s mother; Angourie Rice (“Black Mirror”) as Siobhan Sheehan, Mare...
- 4/1/2021
- by Tyler Hersko
- Indiewire
Mare of Easttown Trailer — HBO‘s Mare of Easttown (2021) TV mini-series trailer has been released. The Mare of Easttown trailer stars Kate Winslet, Sosie Bacon, David Denman, Neal Huff, Izzy King, Cameron Mann, Patrick Murney, Cailee Spaeny, Jean Smart, Angourie Rice, Evan Peters, Julianne Nicholson, James McArdle, Kassie Mundhenk, and [...]
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown Trailer: Kate Winslet’s Life Begins to Unravel as she Investigates a Murder in HBO’s 2021 TV Mini-series...
Continue reading: Mare Of Easttown Trailer: Kate Winslet’s Life Begins to Unravel as she Investigates a Murder in HBO’s 2021 TV Mini-series...
- 2/17/2021
- by Rollo Tomasi
- Film-Book
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