Exclusive: Level 33 Entertainment, the Los Angeles-based sales and distribution outfit, has taken global rights to British thriller Eve ahead of the film’s world premiere at the San Diego International Film Festival on Saturday, October 19.
Set in London’s Notting Hill, the film follows two actresses who have auditioned for the role of Eve in a screen adaptation of Paradise Lost. When one of them is awarded the role, her excitement is quickly tempered by a disturbing home invasion. Unsure of who or what is tormenting her, her sense of reality starts to spiral out of control, threatening her sanity.
Rory Kindersley directed the project, his feature debut, with Toby Cook and Matt Cook producing for their outfit Fablemaze.
Christine Marzano stars, with Rachel Warren, Andrew Lee Potts, Elizabeth Healey, Lex Shrapnel and Jonathan Forbes also in the cast.
Level 33 is lining up a release in early spring 2020. The deal...
Set in London’s Notting Hill, the film follows two actresses who have auditioned for the role of Eve in a screen adaptation of Paradise Lost. When one of them is awarded the role, her excitement is quickly tempered by a disturbing home invasion. Unsure of who or what is tormenting her, her sense of reality starts to spiral out of control, threatening her sanity.
Rory Kindersley directed the project, his feature debut, with Toby Cook and Matt Cook producing for their outfit Fablemaze.
Christine Marzano stars, with Rachel Warren, Andrew Lee Potts, Elizabeth Healey, Lex Shrapnel and Jonathan Forbes also in the cast.
Level 33 is lining up a release in early spring 2020. The deal...
- 10/18/2019
- by Tom Grater
- Deadline Film + TV
We return with the latest edition of the Indie Spotlight, highlighting recent independent horror news sent our way. Today’s feature includes release information for the Reaper Reunion Cast Special, a look at the opening sequence from Ten, photos from The Stanley Film Festival, and more:
Premiere Date Set for Reaper Reunion Cast Special: “FEARnet’s Reaper reunion special was shot on Wednesday, April 24, at the Medusa Lounge in Los Angeles. In attendance for the special—hosted by TV and web personality Angie Greenup—were series stars Ray Wise, Tyler Labine and Bret Harrison, as well as Rick Gonzalez, Ken Marino, Christine Willes and series creators Tara Butters and Michele Fazekas.
The reunion special will air on Tuesday, May 28th at 9 p.m. Et.
“I’m so happy that FEARnet is doing this,” said Ray Wise, who played the Devil on Reaper. “It really warms my heart having us all back together again.
Premiere Date Set for Reaper Reunion Cast Special: “FEARnet’s Reaper reunion special was shot on Wednesday, April 24, at the Medusa Lounge in Los Angeles. In attendance for the special—hosted by TV and web personality Angie Greenup—were series stars Ray Wise, Tyler Labine and Bret Harrison, as well as Rick Gonzalez, Ken Marino, Christine Willes and series creators Tara Butters and Michele Fazekas.
The reunion special will air on Tuesday, May 28th at 9 p.m. Et.
“I’m so happy that FEARnet is doing this,” said Ray Wise, who played the Devil on Reaper. “It really warms my heart having us all back together again.
- 5/5/2013
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
I wish I had the chance to interview more compatriot composers here, but fact is there are very few Hungarian film composers I could talk to. Adam Balazs is one of them - although he lives in Los Angeles, he recently completed his first score to a Hungarian movie: Szíven szúrt ország is a documentary about the murder of a handball player whose tragic death brought forward many unresolved issues within the country. In addition to this new documentary, Ádám's new movie The Butterfly Effect 3: Revelations will have a soundtrack CD released pretty soon, which is a first for the composer (although several of his scores are available through download options). We discussed these and a number of other projects in the following interview:
How did your interest in music begin?
I grew up in a fully musical environment — my father is a distinguished classical composer and before her retirement,...
How did your interest in music begin?
I grew up in a fully musical environment — my father is a distinguished classical composer and before her retirement,...
- 10/3/2009
- Daily Film Music Blog
At the Los Angeles Screamfest last year, one short film stunned us with its look, atmosphere and shocking approach. That was Rory Kindersley and Jason Noto's Butchers Hill . After watching it, it came as no surprise that Kindersley and Noto were using the short as a platform to get a feature film made. And we're all for it. MonteCristo International is behind them in the effort and an official synopsis has been made public. You'll find it below along with a trailer for the short film. After their father charmingly runs off with the family fortune and a man called Brian, Ben and Jenny move from Manhattan to a flyspeck town in New England with their mother, Susanne. The town is characterized by three things: a history of witchcraft and religious slaughter, a slew of missing...
- 9/23/2009
- shocktillyoudrop.com
Year: 2008
Director: Rory Kindersley & Jason Noto
Writers: Rory Kindersley & Jason Noto
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: cyberhal
Rating: 9 out of 10
New England in 1699, a boy and a girl and a big wooden house in the woods. Beautifully shot in pastels and muted colors. Butcher's Hill is a simple story, brilliantly executed, with a wonderfully bloody and unhappy ending. I loved it.
The children dare to enter the inviting empty house and in the kitchen, there's a table overflowing with delicious sugar sprinkled cakes and pastries. The hungry kids plow in. Hello Hansel and Gretel. There's a cauldron boiling on the kitchen fire and that witch has got to be somewhere. It's about now that the little girl discovers something like the end of a human finger in her jam pastry. Mmm.
An average fairy tale? Yes, until the moment when the leper like creature in rags bursts on the...
Director: Rory Kindersley & Jason Noto
Writers: Rory Kindersley & Jason Noto
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: cyberhal
Rating: 9 out of 10
New England in 1699, a boy and a girl and a big wooden house in the woods. Beautifully shot in pastels and muted colors. Butcher's Hill is a simple story, brilliantly executed, with a wonderfully bloody and unhappy ending. I loved it.
The children dare to enter the inviting empty house and in the kitchen, there's a table overflowing with delicious sugar sprinkled cakes and pastries. The hungry kids plow in. Hello Hansel and Gretel. There's a cauldron boiling on the kitchen fire and that witch has got to be somewhere. It's about now that the little girl discovers something like the end of a human finger in her jam pastry. Mmm.
An average fairy tale? Yes, until the moment when the leper like creature in rags bursts on the...
- 10/19/2008
- QuietEarth.us
The second round has been announced which includes some feature length world premiers as well as a host of crazy shorts. Nicolás López's Santos will be premiering in a sweeping tale of comic book nerds vs superheroes in a battle for the future makind, with a Chilean tip. Also playing will be Acolytes or how kids blackmail a serial killer which is quite beautifully shot. One of our favorite shorts will be playing, Osbert Parker's Film Noir. Eel Girl and the twisted Butcher's Hill will also be screened. Check out all the films after the break!
Santos
World Premiere / dir. Nicolás López / Chile / 2008 / 100 min.
Three years after his SXSW debut feature Promedio Rojo, Chilean prodigy director Nicolás López returns with Santos, a wild, sweeping tale of comic book nerds versus superheroes in a battle for the future of mankind. Think Ultraman with a Latin American brain transplant. From...
Santos
World Premiere / dir. Nicolás López / Chile / 2008 / 100 min.
Three years after his SXSW debut feature Promedio Rojo, Chilean prodigy director Nicolás López returns with Santos, a wild, sweeping tale of comic book nerds versus superheroes in a battle for the future of mankind. Think Ultraman with a Latin American brain transplant. From...
- 8/7/2008
- QuietEarth.us
A brief summary of my response to the trailer for Jason Noto and Rory Kindersley’s Butcher’s Hill. “Not bad, nicely shot. Nice design work. Oh, there are the sketches for the feature version. Uh, oh, getting a bit cutesy. Oh My God, I Can’T Believe They Just Did That!”
Heh. Yeah, it ends well.
A chance encounter with the directorial duo at Fantasia left a very good impression, as did the simple fact that they had the good taste to have their poster art done by the same crew that handled Pan’s Labyrinth and that impression was more than borne out by the trailer for their newest short. It’s meant as a pitch device for a feature version based on the same concept and it’s certainly going to get people talking. Check out the trailer below the break.
Heh. Yeah, it ends well.
A chance encounter with the directorial duo at Fantasia left a very good impression, as did the simple fact that they had the good taste to have their poster art done by the same crew that handled Pan’s Labyrinth and that impression was more than borne out by the trailer for their newest short. It’s meant as a pitch device for a feature version based on the same concept and it’s certainly going to get people talking. Check out the trailer below the break.
- 7/18/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
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