Back in October last year Screenterrier hosted a casting call for a lead regular role in a new Sky Atlantic 12 episode drama series Fortitude which is centered on a mysterious death in the Arctic Circle.
Newcomer Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips landed the role of 10 year Carrie Morgan. Elizabeth, from Leigh-on-Sea, attends the Pauline Quirke Academy in Southend and this is her first major TV role.
Fortitude is described as a place like nowhere else. Although surrounded by the savage beauty of the Arctic landscape, Fortitude is one of the safest towns on earth. There has never been a violent crime here. Until now. In such a close-knit community a murder touches everyone and the unsettling, mysterious horror of this crime threatens the future of the town itself.
The series has an all-star cast including Stanley Tucci, Michael Gambon, Christopher Eccleston, Sofie Grabol, Richard Dormer, Jessica Raine, Luke Treadaway, Nicholas Pinnock and Johnny Harris.
Newcomer Elizabeth Dormer-Phillips landed the role of 10 year Carrie Morgan. Elizabeth, from Leigh-on-Sea, attends the Pauline Quirke Academy in Southend and this is her first major TV role.
Fortitude is described as a place like nowhere else. Although surrounded by the savage beauty of the Arctic landscape, Fortitude is one of the safest towns on earth. There has never been a violent crime here. Until now. In such a close-knit community a murder touches everyone and the unsettling, mysterious horror of this crime threatens the future of the town itself.
The series has an all-star cast including Stanley Tucci, Michael Gambon, Christopher Eccleston, Sofie Grabol, Richard Dormer, Jessica Raine, Luke Treadaway, Nicholas Pinnock and Johnny Harris.
- 2/6/2014
- by noreply@blogger.com (ScreenTerrier)
- ScreenTerrier
Julie Harkin Casting Cdg (Utopia, Misfits) are currently casting Fortitude a dramatic new crime thriller written by Simon Donald for Sky Atlantic and Starz produced by Fifty Fathoms/Tiger Aspect.
Thank You For Your Carrie Morgan Suggestions - That Role Is Now Closed
However! We are also looking for a 10 - 12 year old mixed race (dad is black, mum is white) Boy to play Liam Sutter.
If you would like to be considered for an audition, please send a recent picture, your Dob and your location in the UK to Rae at:
This Casting Is Now Closed
Closing Date: 22nd November
Liam Sutter (Male)
Liam is very close to his mum and not so close to his dad. A curious, happy, well-adjusted little boy. Hasn’t made many friends yet in Fortitude but hasn’t had much trouble fitting in. He’s close to Carrie Morgan. He’s not academically...
Thank You For Your Carrie Morgan Suggestions - That Role Is Now Closed
However! We are also looking for a 10 - 12 year old mixed race (dad is black, mum is white) Boy to play Liam Sutter.
If you would like to be considered for an audition, please send a recent picture, your Dob and your location in the UK to Rae at:
This Casting Is Now Closed
Closing Date: 22nd November
Liam Sutter (Male)
Liam is very close to his mum and not so close to his dad. A curious, happy, well-adjusted little boy. Hasn’t made many friends yet in Fortitude but hasn’t had much trouble fitting in. He’s close to Carrie Morgan. He’s not academically...
- 11/13/2013
- by noreply@blogger.com (ScreenTerrier)
- ScreenTerrier
Julie Harkin Casting Cdg (Utopia, Misfits) are currently casting Fortitude a dramatic new crime thriller written by Simon Donald for Sky Atlantic and Starz produced by Fifty Fathoms/Tiger Aspect.
We are looking for an intelligent young actress (9-12 years old) for the role of Carrie Morgan, an independent, straightforward girl who appears throughout the series.
If you would like to be considered for an audition, please send a recent picture and your Date of Birth to Rae at:
This Casting Is Now Closed
Casting Breakdown:
Carrie Morgan (Female)
Carrie has been brought up by her dad and she’s indulged by him a lot. She’s older than her years because she has a natural realisation that things are tough for her dad and she tries her best to help him out. She’s very independently minded for a girl her age. She’s quite fearless and curious. She...
We are looking for an intelligent young actress (9-12 years old) for the role of Carrie Morgan, an independent, straightforward girl who appears throughout the series.
If you would like to be considered for an audition, please send a recent picture and your Date of Birth to Rae at:
This Casting Is Now Closed
Casting Breakdown:
Carrie Morgan (Female)
Carrie has been brought up by her dad and she’s indulged by him a lot. She’s older than her years because she has a natural realisation that things are tough for her dad and she tries her best to help him out. She’s very independently minded for a girl her age. She’s quite fearless and curious. She...
- 10/31/2013
- by noreply@blogger.com (ScreenTerrier)
- ScreenTerrier
Writer-director Richard Dutcher, who single-handedly advanced the notion of Mormon cinema with last year's independent success story "God's Army" (which went on to gross almost 10 times its $300,000 budget), builds on that promise with "Brigham City", an honest-to-goodness Mormon murder mystery.
Very much in the "Witness" mold, this involving, nicely crafted whodunit achieves the neat trick of remaining culturally and theologically true to its environment without being heavy-handed or preachy.
While it should be a respectable niche market performer for its Salt Lake City-based distributor, Excel Entertainment Group, the picture actually has some crossover potential. It would certainly be the perfect companion for something like A&E's "Murder in a Small Town".
Dutcher also steps in front of the camera to play the part of Wes Clayton, the soft-spoken sheriff of the compact, insulated town of Brigham who also serves as a Mormon bishop when not officially keeping the peace.
But the community's nominal tranquility is uprooted when a woman visiting from California is found murdered, and Clayton and his devout posse -- including young deputy Terry (Matthew A. Brown), retired sheriff Stu (Wilford Brimley, crusty as ever) and his spirited secretary, Peg (Carrie Morgan) -- find themselves having to answer to a big-city FBI agent (Tayva Patch) dispatched to solve the crime.
When it subsequently becomes apparent that the murder was the work of a serial killer, and suspicions shift from being cast upon outsiders to the disturbing likelihood of the perpetrator being one of their own, the once friendly town becomes engulfed in a sea of paranoia as doors are locked and windows are shuttered.
Meanwhile, Clayton, who previously lost his wife and child to a tragic accident, suffers a crisis of faith through his inability to nab the murderer and quell the growing fears of his neighbors and congregation.
Working within the well-defined boundaries of the classic movie murder mystery, Dutcher manages to sneak in a couple of genuine surprises in this well-paced if slightly overlong production that benefits greatly from its carefully detailed Mormon backdrop.
Although Dutcher's earnest but mechanical performance proves he's no triple threat, the rest of his predominantly Mormon cast is solid, with effective work from the always reliable Brimley as well as from Patch, who, as the constantly observing but nonbelieving FBI agent, essentially takes the viewer on a guided tour through Dutcher's very personal universe.
Production values certainly go a long way in this $1.2 million production, specifically director of photography Ken Glassing's quietly evocative visuals and Kee L. Miller's convincingly homey production design.
BRIGHAM CITY
Excel Entertainment Group
A Zion Films presentation
Director-screenwriter: Richard Dutcher
Producer: Richard Dutcher
Director of photography: Ken Glassing
Production designer: Kee L. Miller
Editor: Michael Chaskes
Costume designer: Camile J. Morris
Music: Sam Cardon
Color/stereo
Cast:
Wes: Richard Dutcher
Terry: Matthew A. Brown
Stu: Wilford Brimley
Peg: Carrie Morgan
Ed: Jon Enos
Meredith: Tayva Patch
Garcia: Jeff Johnson
Glen: Sterling Brimley
Running time -- 120 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
Very much in the "Witness" mold, this involving, nicely crafted whodunit achieves the neat trick of remaining culturally and theologically true to its environment without being heavy-handed or preachy.
While it should be a respectable niche market performer for its Salt Lake City-based distributor, Excel Entertainment Group, the picture actually has some crossover potential. It would certainly be the perfect companion for something like A&E's "Murder in a Small Town".
Dutcher also steps in front of the camera to play the part of Wes Clayton, the soft-spoken sheriff of the compact, insulated town of Brigham who also serves as a Mormon bishop when not officially keeping the peace.
But the community's nominal tranquility is uprooted when a woman visiting from California is found murdered, and Clayton and his devout posse -- including young deputy Terry (Matthew A. Brown), retired sheriff Stu (Wilford Brimley, crusty as ever) and his spirited secretary, Peg (Carrie Morgan) -- find themselves having to answer to a big-city FBI agent (Tayva Patch) dispatched to solve the crime.
When it subsequently becomes apparent that the murder was the work of a serial killer, and suspicions shift from being cast upon outsiders to the disturbing likelihood of the perpetrator being one of their own, the once friendly town becomes engulfed in a sea of paranoia as doors are locked and windows are shuttered.
Meanwhile, Clayton, who previously lost his wife and child to a tragic accident, suffers a crisis of faith through his inability to nab the murderer and quell the growing fears of his neighbors and congregation.
Working within the well-defined boundaries of the classic movie murder mystery, Dutcher manages to sneak in a couple of genuine surprises in this well-paced if slightly overlong production that benefits greatly from its carefully detailed Mormon backdrop.
Although Dutcher's earnest but mechanical performance proves he's no triple threat, the rest of his predominantly Mormon cast is solid, with effective work from the always reliable Brimley as well as from Patch, who, as the constantly observing but nonbelieving FBI agent, essentially takes the viewer on a guided tour through Dutcher's very personal universe.
Production values certainly go a long way in this $1.2 million production, specifically director of photography Ken Glassing's quietly evocative visuals and Kee L. Miller's convincingly homey production design.
BRIGHAM CITY
Excel Entertainment Group
A Zion Films presentation
Director-screenwriter: Richard Dutcher
Producer: Richard Dutcher
Director of photography: Ken Glassing
Production designer: Kee L. Miller
Editor: Michael Chaskes
Costume designer: Camile J. Morris
Music: Sam Cardon
Color/stereo
Cast:
Wes: Richard Dutcher
Terry: Matthew A. Brown
Stu: Wilford Brimley
Peg: Carrie Morgan
Ed: Jon Enos
Meredith: Tayva Patch
Garcia: Jeff Johnson
Glen: Sterling Brimley
Running time -- 120 minutes
MPAA rating: PG-13...
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