We were supposed to have much more time with Quentin Fields.
Robbie Jones is the special guest on this week’s episode of Drama Queens — the One Tree Hill rewatch podcast co-hosted by series stars Hilarie Burton, Sophia Bush and Bethany Joy Lenz — during which he reveals that his character’s sudden departure in the basketball drama’s sixth season (2008) was the result of a series regular deal gone wrong.
More from TVLineSophia Bush and Hilarie Burton Reenact Classic One Tree Hill Fight Scene, Nearly 20 Years Later - WatchBethany Joy Lenz: 'One Tree Hill Saved My Life' During 'Painful'...
Robbie Jones is the special guest on this week’s episode of Drama Queens — the One Tree Hill rewatch podcast co-hosted by series stars Hilarie Burton, Sophia Bush and Bethany Joy Lenz — during which he reveals that his character’s sudden departure in the basketball drama’s sixth season (2008) was the result of a series regular deal gone wrong.
More from TVLineSophia Bush and Hilarie Burton Reenact Classic One Tree Hill Fight Scene, Nearly 20 Years Later - WatchBethany Joy Lenz: 'One Tree Hill Saved My Life' During 'Painful'...
- 12/5/2023
- by Andy Swift
- TVLine.com
Based on the prize-winning book by Fernanda Melchor, film depicts brutality stemming from ‘war on drugs’ that began in 2006
A group of children find a body in the river: the village witch, her throat slit, writhing with snakes.
The opening scene of Hurricane Season, a new Netflix movie based on the Mexican novelist Fernanda Melchor’s book, plunges the viewer straight into a tropical, lawless, superstitious version of rural Veracruz, Melchor’s home state.
A group of children find a body in the river: the village witch, her throat slit, writhing with snakes.
The opening scene of Hurricane Season, a new Netflix movie based on the Mexican novelist Fernanda Melchor’s book, plunges the viewer straight into a tropical, lawless, superstitious version of rural Veracruz, Melchor’s home state.
- 11/13/2023
- by Thomas Graham in Mexico City
- The Guardian - Film News
The Mexican film Hurricane Season is based on a novel of the same name by Spanish author Fernanda Melchor, who meticulously writes a vicious story of rural Mexico in the most colloquial language possible. To translate that into film would’ve been an impossible task, yet here we have it, and it’s pretty good. Hurricane Season begins with some teens finding a dead corpse in the canal near their small village, La Matosa. A little while later, a bunch of women want to take away the body of this dead woman they call the “witch,” even though they have nothing to do with her. At the same time, a young woman named Yesenia tells the police that she was a witness to a murder, and so the story begins.
Spoilers Ahead
Yesenia
Yesenia is a young, beautiful woman who is insecure because of the people in her little village and her grandmother.
Spoilers Ahead
Yesenia
Yesenia is a young, beautiful woman who is insecure because of the people in her little village and her grandmother.
- 11/2/2023
- by Ruchika Bhat
- Film Fugitives
The latest feature from David Fincher, a big-budget drama series from Steven Knight and Shawn Levy, and an Oscar hopeful starring Annette Bening and Jodie Foster are among the standout new additions hitting Netflix in November.
With The Killer, Fincher reteams with Seven writer Andrew Kevin Walker to adapt the graphic novel written by Alexis Nolent. The film, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival this year and debuts on Netflix on Nov. 10, stars Michael Fassbender as a shadowy unnamed assassin and features a cast that includes Arliss Howard, Charles Parnell, Gabriel Polanco, Kerry O’Malley, Emiliano Pernía, Sala Baker, Sophie Charlotte and Tilda Swinton.
The Hollywood Reporter‘s review of The Killer described the film as “a satisfyingly retro, location-hopping genre exercise with fisticuffs, gadgets (albeit ones bought from Amazon) and smooth-talking antagonists that all plays like a tongue-in-cheek spoof of James Bond movies.”
All the Light We Cannot See...
With The Killer, Fincher reteams with Seven writer Andrew Kevin Walker to adapt the graphic novel written by Alexis Nolent. The film, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival this year and debuts on Netflix on Nov. 10, stars Michael Fassbender as a shadowy unnamed assassin and features a cast that includes Arliss Howard, Charles Parnell, Gabriel Polanco, Kerry O’Malley, Emiliano Pernía, Sala Baker, Sophie Charlotte and Tilda Swinton.
The Hollywood Reporter‘s review of The Killer described the film as “a satisfyingly retro, location-hopping genre exercise with fisticuffs, gadgets (albeit ones bought from Amazon) and smooth-talking antagonists that all plays like a tongue-in-cheek spoof of James Bond movies.”
All the Light We Cannot See...
- 11/2/2023
- by Abid Rahman
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Mexico’s official entry to the Best International Feature Oscar race, Lila Aviles’ “Totem,” and Tatiana Huezo’s documentary “The Echo” (“El Eco”) snagged three prizes apiece at the Morelia International Film Festival (Ficm), which wrapped Sunday, Oct. 29.
The awards doled out Saturday capped a busy 21st edition that saw a constellation of luminaries in town, including Jodie Foster, Jessica Chastain, Peter Saarsgard, Viggo Mortensen, Danny Huston, James Ivory, Irène Jacob and producing partners Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy.
Mexico’s multi-Oscar nominated cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, who received the festival’s Premio Cuervo lifetime achievement award, served as a juror in the official selection which gave best Mexican feature and best director awards to “Totem,” described by Variety as an“intimate, emotionally rich” film. “Totem” also took home the Audience Award, a good indication of its box office potential.
The best screenplay award went to Elisa Miller and Daniela Gómez for their gripping drama,...
The awards doled out Saturday capped a busy 21st edition that saw a constellation of luminaries in town, including Jodie Foster, Jessica Chastain, Peter Saarsgard, Viggo Mortensen, Danny Huston, James Ivory, Irène Jacob and producing partners Frank Marshall and Kathleen Kennedy.
Mexico’s multi-Oscar nominated cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, who received the festival’s Premio Cuervo lifetime achievement award, served as a juror in the official selection which gave best Mexican feature and best director awards to “Totem,” described by Variety as an“intimate, emotionally rich” film. “Totem” also took home the Audience Award, a good indication of its box office potential.
The best screenplay award went to Elisa Miller and Daniela Gómez for their gripping drama,...
- 10/30/2023
- by Anna Marie de la Fuente
- Variety Film + TV
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