Tag: Zero Dark

  • Bella Thorne & Kyra Sedgwick set for thriller Big Sky

    Bella Thorne & Kyra Sedgwick set for thriller Big Sky

    MUMBAI: The star of Disney Channel’s about-to-end Shake It Up continues her march into more mature material. Having joined the indie Home Invasion earlier this year, Bella Thorne has now signed on along with Kyra Sedgwick as the leads in Manis Film’s thriller Big Sky.

     

    The English language debut by Jorge Michel Grau, who helmed the original Spanish language chiller We Are What We Are, features Thorne as Hazel and the former The Closer star as her protective mother Dee. On their way to a desert facility to help the teen deal with her paralysing agoraphobia, the two find themselves attacked by gunmen and Hazel has to fight her own demons for the duo to survive.

     

    Frank Grillo, who starred in End of Watch, Zero Dark Thirty and will be in upcoming CaptainAmerica: The Winter Soldier plays the male lead in the film along with Les Miserables’ Aaron Tveit. Randy Manis, Matthew Salloway and Christina Papagjika are producing. Christine Vachon is executive producing for Killer Films with Jeffrey V. Mandel of TBD Syndicate and AKA pictures’ Clayton Young. Ricky Tollman is co-producing.

     

    AKA pictures – a subsidiary of Benaroya Pictures – is co-financing Big Sky. Having finished Warner Bros’ The Familymoon with Adam Sandler and Drew Berrymore earlier this summer, Thorne is next set for Disney’s Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.

     

    With The Closer having wrapped on TNT last year, Sedgwick is scheduled to appear on the big screen in the upcoming Kill Your Darlings, Reach Me and Gren Wells’ The Road Within.

  • Zero Dark Thirty bags four awards at Vancouver Film Fest

    Zero Dark Thirty bags four awards at Vancouver Film Fest

    MUMBAI: Kathryn Bigelow‘s Zero Dark Thirty has picked up four trophies at the Vancouver Film Critics Circle Awards, including best film. The director‘s drama about the hunt for Osama bin Laden also earned best director, best actress for Jessica Chastain and best screenplay for Mark Boal.

    Also big at the Canadian critics‘ kudosfest was Paul Thomas Anderson‘s The Master, which got Joaquin Phoenix the best actor award, with the best supporting actor trophy for Philip Seymour Hoffman and best supporting actress for Amy Adams.

    Vancouver film critics gave Leos Carax‘s Holy Motors the best foreign-language film trophy, while Malik Bendjelloul‘s Searching for Sugar Man was chosen as the best documentary of 2012.

    In the Canadian film categories, Kim Nguyen‘s Rebelle, a drama about child soldiers in Congo, won for best Canuck movie, while lead Rachel Mwanza won for best actress and Serge Kanyinda was selected best supporting actor.

    And another Canadian film, Beyond the Black Rainbow, won three awards, including best British Columbia film, best Canadian director for Panos Cosmatos and best actor in a Canadian film for Michael Rogers.