The Gotham Group has picked up the English language remake rights to the Italian feature film The Nest (Il Nido), Italian director Roberto De Feo's debut feature.
The horror pic premiered at the Locarno Film Festival last year and was released theatrically in August 2019. The Nest portrays a young boy growing up in a rural mansion dominated by a heartless matriarch, Elena (Francesca Cavallin), who goes to sadistic lengths to protect her crippled son, Samuel (Justin Alexander Korovkin), from the dangers of the outside world.
It takes the arrival of a new girl to push the young boy ...
The horror pic premiered at the Locarno Film Festival last year and was released theatrically in August 2019. The Nest portrays a young boy growing up in a rural mansion dominated by a heartless matriarch, Elena (Francesca Cavallin), who goes to sadistic lengths to protect her crippled son, Samuel (Justin Alexander Korovkin), from the dangers of the outside world.
It takes the arrival of a new girl to push the young boy ...
- 1/29/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
The Gotham Group has picked up the English language remake rights to the Italian feature film The Nest (Il Nido), Italian director Roberto De Feo's debut feature.
The horror pic premiered at the Locarno Film Festival last year and was released theatrically in August 2019. The Nest portrays a young boy growing up in a rural mansion dominated by a heartless matriarch Elena (Francesca Cavallin), who goes to sadistic lengths to protect her crippled son, Samuel (Justin Alexander Korovkin), from the dangers of the outside world.
It takes the arrival of a new girl to push the young boy ...
The horror pic premiered at the Locarno Film Festival last year and was released theatrically in August 2019. The Nest portrays a young boy growing up in a rural mansion dominated by a heartless matriarch Elena (Francesca Cavallin), who goes to sadistic lengths to protect her crippled son, Samuel (Justin Alexander Korovkin), from the dangers of the outside world.
It takes the arrival of a new girl to push the young boy ...
- 1/29/2020
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Gentleman Jack’s Sophie Rundle and Line of Duty’s Martin Compston lead the line for BBC One’s forthcoming thriller The Nest.
The pair front the five-part drama, from Nicole Taylor, the writer of hit British drama Three Girls, alongside newcomer Mirren Mack.
Dan (Compston) and Emily (Rundle) are crazy about each other. They live in a huge house in a beautiful location just outside Glasgow and want for nothing. All that’s missing is a baby – and they’ve been trying for years. Through a chance encounter they meet Kaya (Mack), an 18-year-old from the other side of the city, whose life is as precarious at theirs is comfortable. When Kaya agrees to carry their baby, it feels like they were meant to meet, but was it really by chance? Who is Kaya and what has brought her to this couple? Can the dreams of Kaya, Emily and...
The pair front the five-part drama, from Nicole Taylor, the writer of hit British drama Three Girls, alongside newcomer Mirren Mack.
Dan (Compston) and Emily (Rundle) are crazy about each other. They live in a huge house in a beautiful location just outside Glasgow and want for nothing. All that’s missing is a baby – and they’ve been trying for years. Through a chance encounter they meet Kaya (Mack), an 18-year-old from the other side of the city, whose life is as precarious at theirs is comfortable. When Kaya agrees to carry their baby, it feels like they were meant to meet, but was it really by chance? Who is Kaya and what has brought her to this couple? Can the dreams of Kaya, Emily and...
- 8/27/2019
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Roberto De Feo is fresh from a Locarno bow with his debut feature The Nest, presented in the Crazy Midnight slot of the Piazza Grande section. It’s the appropriate setting for this nocturnal, fairly self-aware horror movie which knowingly toys with some of the genre’s established tropes – chiefly among them, the old house in the middle of nowhere and a secluded community inhabiting it. It’s notable for its roots in the Italian tradition of horror, which has surprisingly faded in the course of the last few decades, but has given some signs of new life recently.
In The Nest, a boy grows up in an isolated mansion surrounded by his mother and extended family.…...
In The Nest, a boy grows up in an isolated mansion surrounded by his mother and extended family.…...
- 8/23/2019
- by Tommaso Tocci
- IONCINEMA.com
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