Netflix’s trailer for Virgin River season five part one shows Mel choosing to take care of herself instead of work. It also shows a fire raging, relationships being put to the test, and a coming together of Virgin River’s citizens are in store over the upcoming first half of season five.
Season five stars Alexandra Breckenridge, Martin Henderson, Tim Matheson, Annette O’Toole, Colin Lawrence, and Benjamin Hollingsworth. Zibby Allen, Sarah Dugdale, Marco Grazzini, Mark Ghanimé, Kai Bradbury, and Kandyse McClure also star.
Additional cast includes Lauren Hammersley, Teryl Rothery, Nicola Cavendish, Gwynyth Walsh, and Christina Jastrzembska. Plus, Stacey Farber, Jenny Cooper, Lucia Walters, Steve Bacic, Libby Osler, and Keith MacKechnie appear in season five. And Barbara Pollard, Trevor Lerner, Ellie Harvie, Darcy Laurie, Sandy Robson, Lexa Doig, Chase Petriw, Emma Oliver, Michelle Addison, Miranda Edwards, and Gabrielle Jacinto are also a part of the huge ensemble.
Season five directors include Monika Mitchell,...
Season five stars Alexandra Breckenridge, Martin Henderson, Tim Matheson, Annette O’Toole, Colin Lawrence, and Benjamin Hollingsworth. Zibby Allen, Sarah Dugdale, Marco Grazzini, Mark Ghanimé, Kai Bradbury, and Kandyse McClure also star.
Additional cast includes Lauren Hammersley, Teryl Rothery, Nicola Cavendish, Gwynyth Walsh, and Christina Jastrzembska. Plus, Stacey Farber, Jenny Cooper, Lucia Walters, Steve Bacic, Libby Osler, and Keith MacKechnie appear in season five. And Barbara Pollard, Trevor Lerner, Ellie Harvie, Darcy Laurie, Sandy Robson, Lexa Doig, Chase Petriw, Emma Oliver, Michelle Addison, Miranda Edwards, and Gabrielle Jacinto are also a part of the huge ensemble.
Season five directors include Monika Mitchell,...
- 8/9/2023
- by Rebecca Murray
- Showbiz Junkies
Spoiler Alert: This article contains details of the upcoming Season 5 of Netflix’s Virgin River.
Virgin River’s upcoming fifth season will debut on Netflix Sept. 7 with a 10-episode run. The last two hours of Season 5’s 12-episode order will drop Nov. 30 as holiday episodes.
This is a first for the popular romantic drama, starring Alexandra Breckenridge and Martin Henderson, whose previous seasons, consisting of 10 episodes (S1-3) and 12 episodes (S3), were all released in a single drop.
The official logline for Season 5 teases key upcoming developments, also illustrated by some of the first-look images released, including Brie taking the stand as she bravely takes her rapist to trial, a massive wildfire coming dangerously close to Virgin River, and Doc and Hope back in their elements after their respective health scares, with Doc at the medical practice and Hope making a public speech.
The photos also confirm that Dr. Cameron...
Virgin River’s upcoming fifth season will debut on Netflix Sept. 7 with a 10-episode run. The last two hours of Season 5’s 12-episode order will drop Nov. 30 as holiday episodes.
This is a first for the popular romantic drama, starring Alexandra Breckenridge and Martin Henderson, whose previous seasons, consisting of 10 episodes (S1-3) and 12 episodes (S3), were all released in a single drop.
The official logline for Season 5 teases key upcoming developments, also illustrated by some of the first-look images released, including Brie taking the stand as she bravely takes her rapist to trial, a massive wildfire coming dangerously close to Virgin River, and Doc and Hope back in their elements after their respective health scares, with Doc at the medical practice and Hope making a public speech.
The photos also confirm that Dr. Cameron...
- 7/25/2023
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Title: The Bouquet Directed by: Anne Wheeler Starring: Kristy Swanson, Danny Glover, Nicola Cavendish, Michael Shanks, Alberta Mayne Running time: 90 minutes, Unrated (safe for G audiences) Special features: The Making of The Bouquet featurette An elderly couple are struggling with their home florist business. They have two daughters, one is a New York business woman and the other is a dedicated activist; both are always too busy to see their parents. When dad suddenly drops dead at Easter dinner, the two women realize that being a family and helping each other is more important than their own selfish desires. I’m not going to mince words, this movie was predictable [ Read More ]
The post The Bouquet DVD Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
The post The Bouquet DVD Movie Review appeared first on Shockya.com.
- 2/6/2013
- by juliana
- ShockYa
CHICAGO -- Picture Orson Welles as a tubby tyke spread out on the living room floor listening to ''The Mystic, '' his favorite mystery series, on the family radio.
Then unleash the imagination as the hyper-stimulated kid discovers his own real-life mystery and sets out ''Mystic''-style to uncover the culprits. Now throw in lunar eclipses, Christmas Eve, a dotty aunt, a girl who likes to French-kiss, a dusty thumbprint and, of course, the usual suspects.
That adds up to a two-popcorn bag matinee, the kind of playful, grand stuff that Steven Spielberg or Robert Zemeckis might concoct but is all too rare in kids' fare today.
Like little boys throughout eternity, Tommy Doyle (Jeremy Radick) has a heavy daily load: officious teachers, overly structured parents, playground bullies and schoolgirls of mystery. No wonder he retreats into the exalted imaginary world of his mentor, The Mystic.
It's a boyhood enthusiasm that everyone tolerates until Tommy sticks his nose into a police investigation: The father of one of Tommy's best friends has been beaten and robbed, and the police, in Tommy's opinion, are bollixing up the investigation.
Not that he doesn't like adults. His favorite, perhaps, is Officer Ozzie (Ned Beatty) who, in between his policely duties, doubles as Santa Claus at the local department store. But big people tend to get so bogged down in their own squirrelly little patterns that they aren't exactly capable of taking bold courses of action, namely, solving a crime.
Not that Tommy's got that much free space to navigate in either; between choir practice, homework and serving as Santa's elf, there's not much time for crime-solving.
Crammed with more colorful ingredients than a Christmas fruit cake, ''Angel Square, '' which screened here at the Chicago International Film Festival, scampers along at a devilishly wonderful pace. James Defelice and Anne Wheeler's screenplay is jaunty, kind-hearted and chock-full of surprises and quirks.
There's more here than one typically finds in two adult, summer-release plots and it's stiched into a clear and precise story line. Wheeler's hop-skip-and-jump direction -- attention Amblin -- is terrific, both balmy and clear-eyed.
As Tommy ''The Mystic'' Doyle, Jeremy Radick is perfectly cast; his sharp-eyed exuberance and clunky mannerisms are perfectly meshed. Ned Beatty, whether in his cop uniform or Santa Claus costume, concocts a pleasingly hurly-burly performance, while Nicola Cavendish is nicely maddening as Tommy's strict and goofy aunt.
Technical credits, most prominently Tobias Schliessler's warm-hued cinematography, are splendid.
ANGEL SQUARE
Telefilm Canada
Producer Arvi Liimatainen
Director Anne Wheeler
Screenwriters James Defelice, Anne Wheeler
Based on the novel ''Angel Square'' by Brian Doyle
Director of photography Tobias Schliessler
Music George Blondheim
Editors Peter Svab, Lenka Svab
Color/Stereo
Cast:
Tommy Doyle Jeremy Radick
Officer Ozzie Ned Beatty
Aunt Dotti Nicola Cavendish
Running time -- 104 minutes
No MPAA rating
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
Then unleash the imagination as the hyper-stimulated kid discovers his own real-life mystery and sets out ''Mystic''-style to uncover the culprits. Now throw in lunar eclipses, Christmas Eve, a dotty aunt, a girl who likes to French-kiss, a dusty thumbprint and, of course, the usual suspects.
That adds up to a two-popcorn bag matinee, the kind of playful, grand stuff that Steven Spielberg or Robert Zemeckis might concoct but is all too rare in kids' fare today.
Like little boys throughout eternity, Tommy Doyle (Jeremy Radick) has a heavy daily load: officious teachers, overly structured parents, playground bullies and schoolgirls of mystery. No wonder he retreats into the exalted imaginary world of his mentor, The Mystic.
It's a boyhood enthusiasm that everyone tolerates until Tommy sticks his nose into a police investigation: The father of one of Tommy's best friends has been beaten and robbed, and the police, in Tommy's opinion, are bollixing up the investigation.
Not that he doesn't like adults. His favorite, perhaps, is Officer Ozzie (Ned Beatty) who, in between his policely duties, doubles as Santa Claus at the local department store. But big people tend to get so bogged down in their own squirrelly little patterns that they aren't exactly capable of taking bold courses of action, namely, solving a crime.
Not that Tommy's got that much free space to navigate in either; between choir practice, homework and serving as Santa's elf, there's not much time for crime-solving.
Crammed with more colorful ingredients than a Christmas fruit cake, ''Angel Square, '' which screened here at the Chicago International Film Festival, scampers along at a devilishly wonderful pace. James Defelice and Anne Wheeler's screenplay is jaunty, kind-hearted and chock-full of surprises and quirks.
There's more here than one typically finds in two adult, summer-release plots and it's stiched into a clear and precise story line. Wheeler's hop-skip-and-jump direction -- attention Amblin -- is terrific, both balmy and clear-eyed.
As Tommy ''The Mystic'' Doyle, Jeremy Radick is perfectly cast; his sharp-eyed exuberance and clunky mannerisms are perfectly meshed. Ned Beatty, whether in his cop uniform or Santa Claus costume, concocts a pleasingly hurly-burly performance, while Nicola Cavendish is nicely maddening as Tommy's strict and goofy aunt.
Technical credits, most prominently Tobias Schliessler's warm-hued cinematography, are splendid.
ANGEL SQUARE
Telefilm Canada
Producer Arvi Liimatainen
Director Anne Wheeler
Screenwriters James Defelice, Anne Wheeler
Based on the novel ''Angel Square'' by Brian Doyle
Director of photography Tobias Schliessler
Music George Blondheim
Editors Peter Svab, Lenka Svab
Color/Stereo
Cast:
Tommy Doyle Jeremy Radick
Officer Ozzie Ned Beatty
Aunt Dotti Nicola Cavendish
Running time -- 104 minutes
No MPAA rating
(c) The Hollywood Reporter...
- 10/18/1991
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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