Midverse Studios's mobile game, Penny Dreadful: Demimonde, is currently in development and you can sign up for the beta version is going on now. Universal Cable Productions projects update and exclusive Frank Forte and Asylum Press prints are also featured in this round-up.
Penny Dreadful Mobile Game: Press Release: "Midverse Studios, a Silicon Valley mobile gaming company, announced that it is developing a game based on the Showtime hit TV Series Penny Dreadful. The new game called Penny Dreadful: Demimonde, will allow fans of the show to engage with their favorite characters and content from the series.
The game, under license by CBS Consumer Products, is currently under development and will be launched this fall for mobile phones and tablet devices. Penny Dreadful: Demimonde will be released via the Apple App Store, Google Play Store and Amazon Kindle store, with a Facebook version of the game set to follow.
Penny Dreadful Mobile Game: Press Release: "Midverse Studios, a Silicon Valley mobile gaming company, announced that it is developing a game based on the Showtime hit TV Series Penny Dreadful. The new game called Penny Dreadful: Demimonde, will allow fans of the show to engage with their favorite characters and content from the series.
The game, under license by CBS Consumer Products, is currently under development and will be launched this fall for mobile phones and tablet devices. Penny Dreadful: Demimonde will be released via the Apple App Store, Google Play Store and Amazon Kindle store, with a Facebook version of the game set to follow.
- 7/9/2015
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Dark Horse Comics has paired with Universal Cable Productions to produce at least four comic book TV shows, including Umbrella Academy…
Will we ever be finished updating our list of upcoming comic book TV shows? Probably not, and today we have four more to add to the roster. This is due to Dark Horse Comics’ decision to sign a first-look deal with Universal Cable Productions.
Under this new alliance, four new shows have been put straight into development: Cullen Bunn and Tyler Crook's Harrow County; Gerard Way and Gabriel Ba's The Umbrella Academy (previously touted to be a film); Paul Chadwick's Concrete; and, an adaptation of Tom Vaughn’s feature script Back Up. That last one's the anomaly, seeing as no Dark Horse comics under that title have been published, yet.
Here are the official descriptions of these new projects, from the official press bumf…
Harrow County
"Emmy has always known that the deep,...
Will we ever be finished updating our list of upcoming comic book TV shows? Probably not, and today we have four more to add to the roster. This is due to Dark Horse Comics’ decision to sign a first-look deal with Universal Cable Productions.
Under this new alliance, four new shows have been put straight into development: Cullen Bunn and Tyler Crook's Harrow County; Gerard Way and Gabriel Ba's The Umbrella Academy (previously touted to be a film); Paul Chadwick's Concrete; and, an adaptation of Tom Vaughn’s feature script Back Up. That last one's the anomaly, seeing as no Dark Horse comics under that title have been published, yet.
Here are the official descriptions of these new projects, from the official press bumf…
Harrow County
"Emmy has always known that the deep,...
- 7/8/2015
- by rleane
- Den of Geek
Invisibility
Warner Bros. Pictures has acquired the screen rights to David Levithan and Andrea Cremer's young adult supernatural romance novel "Invisibility". No writer or producer is currently attached.
The story follows a sixteen-year-old boy who is literally invisible. He then meets and falls for his new neighbor, the one person who can actually see him. The two the set out to discover the truth behind his affliction, uncovering curses and spells along the way. [Source: Heat Vision]
Black Man (aka. "Thirteen")
Producers Kate Cohen and Marisa Polvino ("Transcendence") have acquired the rights to Richard K. Morgan's 2007 futuristic noir thriller novel "Black Man" (aka. "Thirteen").
Kenny Golde will adapt the screenplay. The story follows a man hired to take down a dangerous genetically-enhanced soldier who has returned to Earth and has left a trail of brutally slain bodies in his wake. [Source: Heat Vision]
Blood Will Out
"Up in the Air" novelist Walter Kirn and scribe Sheldon Turner...
Warner Bros. Pictures has acquired the screen rights to David Levithan and Andrea Cremer's young adult supernatural romance novel "Invisibility". No writer or producer is currently attached.
The story follows a sixteen-year-old boy who is literally invisible. He then meets and falls for his new neighbor, the one person who can actually see him. The two the set out to discover the truth behind his affliction, uncovering curses and spells along the way. [Source: Heat Vision]
Black Man (aka. "Thirteen")
Producers Kate Cohen and Marisa Polvino ("Transcendence") have acquired the rights to Richard K. Morgan's 2007 futuristic noir thriller novel "Black Man" (aka. "Thirteen").
Kenny Golde will adapt the screenplay. The story follows a man hired to take down a dangerous genetically-enhanced soldier who has returned to Earth and has left a trail of brutally slain bodies in his wake. [Source: Heat Vision]
Blood Will Out
"Up in the Air" novelist Walter Kirn and scribe Sheldon Turner...
- 5/7/2014
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
Transcendence producers Kate Cohen and Marisa Polvino are heading back to the future. The Straight Up Films duo, who developed and produced the recent Johnny Depp sci-fi vehicle, have acquired the rights to the futuristic noir thriller Thirteen. Written by Richard K. Morgan, the novel was first published in 2008 and won the prestigious Arthur C. Clarke Award for science fiction literature. Morgan also previously won the Philip K. Dick Award for distinguished science fiction writing. Photos: THR's Lit Agent Roundtable: 'The Hardest Books to Sell Have Ended Up Selling the Best' Kenny Golde will write the screenplay. He most recently adapted
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- 5/6/2014
- by Tatiana Siegel
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Chicago – In movie land, the World War II Holocaust drama has been more personal – and in many ways more horrific – in our modern era. The latest film to tell a different story, from a different angle, is director Mark Schmidt’s “Walking with the Enemy.”
Rating: 3.5/5.0
The film is set near the end of the war, in Budapest, Hungary, which was a late territory takeover from the Nazi regime. As in the other takeovers, the Jewish population is marginalized and rounded up for extermination. The twist in this tale is that an underground movement fought back by actually impersonating the Nazi officers to redirect groups of Jewish captives, and set up a system to create passports to Switzerland and safety. The film is a fictionalized drama of these circumstances, but it faithfully resurrects the tension and terror having to do with the risk, and the excellent performances by Jonas Armstrong...
Rating: 3.5/5.0
The film is set near the end of the war, in Budapest, Hungary, which was a late territory takeover from the Nazi regime. As in the other takeovers, the Jewish population is marginalized and rounded up for extermination. The twist in this tale is that an underground movement fought back by actually impersonating the Nazi officers to redirect groups of Jewish captives, and set up a system to create passports to Switzerland and safety. The film is a fictionalized drama of these circumstances, but it faithfully resurrects the tension and terror having to do with the risk, and the excellent performances by Jonas Armstrong...
- 4/26/2014
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Chicago – World War II will never be over, in a sense, as long as it continues to influence the culture or teach us lessons about our contemporary lives. The new film “Walking with the Enemy” is rooted in the Holocaust, but uses the twist of a Hungarian Jew who brashly impersonated a Nazi officer to relocate his counterparts.
“Walking with the Enemy” is inspired by the true story of Tibor Rosenbaum, who led a group of resistance fighters, and saved many Jewish lives through his Nazi officer impersonations, also directing his people to the “Glass House,” an old factory that printed Swiss passports for those Hungarian Jews during the war. The story in the film is condensed and fictionalized through the character of Elek Cohen, portrayed by Jonas Armstrong (known in Britain for his role as Robin Hood, portrayed on a TV series from 2006-09). British character actor Simon Dutton portrays Miklos Schoen,...
“Walking with the Enemy” is inspired by the true story of Tibor Rosenbaum, who led a group of resistance fighters, and saved many Jewish lives through his Nazi officer impersonations, also directing his people to the “Glass House,” an old factory that printed Swiss passports for those Hungarian Jews during the war. The story in the film is condensed and fictionalized through the character of Elek Cohen, portrayed by Jonas Armstrong (known in Britain for his role as Robin Hood, portrayed on a TV series from 2006-09). British character actor Simon Dutton portrays Miklos Schoen,...
- 4/24/2014
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Chicago – In the latest HollywoodChicago.com Hookup: Film, we have 25 pairs of advance-screening movie passes up for grabs to “Walking With the Enemy” with Ben Kingsley!
“Walking With the Enemy,” which is not rated and opens on April 25, 2014, also stars Jonas Armstrong, Hannah Tointon, Charles Hubbell, Burn Gorman, Shane Taylor and William Hope from writer and director Mark Schmidt and writer Kenny Golde. The film is inspired by a true story.
To win your free “Walking With the Enemy” passes courtesy of HollywoodChicago.com, just get interactive with our social media widget below. That’s it! This screening is on Wednesday, April 23, 2014 at 8 p.m. in downtown Chicago. The more social actions you complete, the more points you score and the higher yours odds of winning! Completing these social actions only increases your odds of winning; this doesn’t intensify your competition!
Preferably, use your computer to enter rather than your smartphone.
“Walking With the Enemy,” which is not rated and opens on April 25, 2014, also stars Jonas Armstrong, Hannah Tointon, Charles Hubbell, Burn Gorman, Shane Taylor and William Hope from writer and director Mark Schmidt and writer Kenny Golde. The film is inspired by a true story.
To win your free “Walking With the Enemy” passes courtesy of HollywoodChicago.com, just get interactive with our social media widget below. That’s it! This screening is on Wednesday, April 23, 2014 at 8 p.m. in downtown Chicago. The more social actions you complete, the more points you score and the higher yours odds of winning! Completing these social actions only increases your odds of winning; this doesn’t intensify your competition!
Preferably, use your computer to enter rather than your smartphone.
- 4/18/2014
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Check out the poster and 16 images from Walking with the Enemy starring Jonas Armstrong and Ben Kingsley. The Liberty Studios release was shown at this year's Hamptons International Film Festival, and also includes Hannah Tointon, Simon Kunz, Simon Dutton, Burn Gorman, Shane Taylor, William Hope and Flora Specer-Longhurst. Kenny Golde wrote the script from the story by Mark Schmidt, Randy Williams and Golde. Read the full synopsis below the gallery. Inspired by a true story, Walking with the Enemy follows the heroic lives of a world leader and a young man swept up in the horrors of WWII. Regent Horthy (Ben Kingsley)...
- 12/2/2013
- Upcoming-Movies.com
On-set photos of Simon Pegg and Andy Serkis shooting Burke and Hare, Angelina Jolie on the set of the Johnny Depp thriller The Tourist, and a new shot from Tron: Legacy.
There's also impressive retro poster artwork for BAFTA's five Best Film Nominees, and a disturbing CG concept sketch of "Toy Story" character Buzz Lightyear as a human at SeagullsFly.
"Zach Galifianakis ("The Hangover") is attached to the buddy supernatural comedy "Miracle Workers" about a pair of friends who pose as exorcists..." (full details)
"Mickey Rourke is apparently in talks to play King Hyperion in Tarsem's ancient Greek war epic "War of the Gods"..." (full details)
"'Watchmen' and 'Leap Year' actor Matthew Goode has confirmed in an interview that he auditioned for the role of Bilbo Baggins in Guillermo del Toro's two-part film of "The Hobbit"..." (full details)
"Tobey Maguire will produce and potentially star...
There's also impressive retro poster artwork for BAFTA's five Best Film Nominees, and a disturbing CG concept sketch of "Toy Story" character Buzz Lightyear as a human at SeagullsFly.
"Zach Galifianakis ("The Hangover") is attached to the buddy supernatural comedy "Miracle Workers" about a pair of friends who pose as exorcists..." (full details)
"Mickey Rourke is apparently in talks to play King Hyperion in Tarsem's ancient Greek war epic "War of the Gods"..." (full details)
"'Watchmen' and 'Leap Year' actor Matthew Goode has confirmed in an interview that he auditioned for the role of Bilbo Baggins in Guillermo del Toro's two-part film of "The Hobbit"..." (full details)
"Tobey Maguire will produce and potentially star...
- 2/25/2010
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
"Killer." It's a simple, direct and effective word that cuts straight to the point, presumably through your guts. It's also the name of a movie coming out courtesy of Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/MacDonald Prods., two companies that have teamed up to produce Kenny Golde's horror-minded spec script.
According to Variety, "Killer" focuses on a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left behind by the titular murderer. What follows is an intense cat-and-mouse game where the investigator is always several strides behind his intended target.
Several news outlets, including Shock Till You Drop, are reporting that the big hook of "Killer" — other than the killing, that is — is the fact that the movie is told through the point of view of the police officer as he videotapes his investigation of the crime. Eventually, the story shifts back and forth between the cop's camera and the killer's grotesque video.
According to Variety, "Killer" focuses on a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left behind by the titular murderer. What follows is an intense cat-and-mouse game where the investigator is always several strides behind his intended target.
Several news outlets, including Shock Till You Drop, are reporting that the big hook of "Killer" — other than the killing, that is — is the fact that the movie is told through the point of view of the police officer as he videotapes his investigation of the crime. Eventually, the story shifts back and forth between the cop's camera and the killer's grotesque video.
- 2/23/2010
- by Josh Wigler
- MTV Movies Blog
The cat-and-mouse game between killer and cop is such a tried and true genre that we've seen just about every permutation by now. Either both the cop and the criminal are good guys, the cop is corrupt and the criminal is wrongfully accused, both are crooks, etc. etc. It's all been done, so the only thing you can do it pick your favorite combination and try to make it original. Theoretically that's what Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/MacDonald Prods. will be trying with Killer, a spec script by Kenny Golde that they've recently picked up, according to Variety. This time the cop is a rogue, and the killer has left a video that 'triggers a cat-and-mouse game, with the investigator several steps behind his prey." Right now I'm thinking Law Abiding Citizen but with Jamie Foxx's character being the bad guy, though since no movie could possibly be...
- 2/23/2010
- cinemablend.com
Variety reports that Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/MacDonald Prods. are teaming on to develop and produce Killer , based upon a spec by Kenny Golde. The story centers on a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left by a killer, triggering a cat-and-mouse game, with the investigator several steps behind his prey. As the story moves back and forth between the lunatic.s homage to his own madness, and the Pov of the investigation, the lines blur until the police become a part of the killer.s film. Producers are Hyde Park topper Ashok Amritraj and exec veep Patrick Aiello and Parkes/MacDonald's Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald.
- 2/23/2010
- shocktillyoudrop.com
Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/MacDonald Productions are teaming on Kenny Golde's spec script Killer . The story centers on a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left by a killer, triggering a cat-and-mouse game, with the investigator several steps behind his prey. Producers are Hyde Park's Ashok Amritraj and Executive VP Patrick Aiello and Parkes/MacDonald's Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald.
- 2/23/2010
- Comingsoon.net
There's nothing quite like a good game of cat and mouse. Especially when said cat is a homicidal maniac! Yep, that's when things can get really interesting!
According to Variety Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/ MacDonald Prods. are teaming up to bring us a new film called Killer, snapping up Kenny Golde's spec script preemptively and launching development.
The film tells the tale of a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left by a killer, triggering a cat-and-mouse game, with the investigator several steps behind his prey.
Familiar ground for sure, but hey, at least it's not a remake! Let's just hope for an R rating and liberal usage of the red stuff, shall we?
- Uncle Creepy
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Hunt down your own killer in the Dread Central forums!
According to Variety Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/ MacDonald Prods. are teaming up to bring us a new film called Killer, snapping up Kenny Golde's spec script preemptively and launching development.
The film tells the tale of a rogue police investigator who discovers a video left by a killer, triggering a cat-and-mouse game, with the investigator several steps behind his prey.
Familiar ground for sure, but hey, at least it's not a remake! Let's just hope for an R rating and liberal usage of the red stuff, shall we?
- Uncle Creepy
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Hunt down your own killer in the Dread Central forums!
- 2/23/2010
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Hyde Park Entertainment and Parkes/MacDonald Productions have acquired Kenny Golde's spec screenplay Killer. The contained thriller was originally written with the intent to produce the film on a low budget. I heard that the screenplay was originally making the rounds at Paramount's new low-budget film division and Fox Searchlight, but quickly made its way up to the bigger studios. The story is told through the point of view of a single video camera held by a police officer videotaping a murder investigation. While investigating the crime scene, the police discover a video left by the killer, made with hidden cameras planted throughout the house they are investigating. "As the story moves back and forth between the lunatic’s homage to his own madness, and the Pov of the investigation, the lines blur until the police become a part of the killer’s film." The scenario rather unpleasant, and...
- 2/23/2010
- by Peter Sciretta
- Slash Film
The upcoming live action version of the classic tale Jack and the Beanstalk, starring Chevy Chase and Christopher Lloyd, gets an original score by Randy Miller, a versatile composer whose previous credits include Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth and who has orchestrated and conducted scores such as The Fast and the Furious and Driven. The film is directed by Gary J. Tunnicliffe, a make-up effects wizard who also worked on Hellraiser III and a lot of other genre movies, including Sleepy Hollow, Blade and Exorcist: The Beginning. Randy Miller has also composed the music for Uncross the Stars, a drama comedy starring Ron Perlman and Barbara Hershey, directed by Kenny Golde.
- 8/4/2008
- by noreply@blogger.com (Mikael Carlsson)
- MovieScore Magazine
Daryl Hannah, who worked with helmer John Sayles on his upcoming Casa de los Babys for IFC Films, will reteam with the director on his next project, Silver City. At the same time, the actress has inked with Writers & Artists Agency. Details of Silver City are being closely guarded, but it's described as a political drama/murder mystery that tells the story of a small town in Colorado and the events leading up to a local election. Among those events is the discovery of a man's body in a local lake and the mystery surrounding his death. Hannah will play a wild girl named Wendy. Maggie Renzi is producing from a script by Sayles. Shooting is due to begin next month. In addition to Writers & Artists, Hannah will continue to be repped by manager Chuck Binder. Hannah has been on a roll lately, starring onscreen in the Polish brothers' Northfork for Paramount Classics. She also has four other projects in the can: She next stars in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, followed by Sayles' Babys, Kenny Golde's The Job and Steve Anderson's The Big Empty.
Daryl Hannah is teaming with Brad Renfro and William Forsythe to star in the indie film The Job for director Kenny Golde and Platform Entertainment. Shooting is scheduled to start Nov. 6 in Los Angeles. Golde also penned the script, which follows a female hit woman (Hannah) who desperately wants to get out of her job. She's faced with killing a pregnant woman and the woman's husband, only to become haunted by her own past when she also becomes pregnant. Renfro will play the role of Troy, the reluctant drug-dealer husband, while Forsythe will star as Vernon, the head of the hit-man operation.
- 10/1/2002
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
"The Smokers" are three middle-American bad girls for whom everyday is Halloween and every bong hit is an act of rebellion.
In their little counter-culture cell of an otherwise noneventful boarding school in Wisconsin, boys are the object and the enemy and a gun becomes the way to "change the game." Not an uncommon problem, however, the filmmakers have had a few too many puffs of movies-can-be-political-and-fun locoweed to take this one seriously.
The directorial debut of Christina Peters, who co-wrote the screenplay with producer Kenny Golde, "Smokers" unspooled with a thud at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Thora Birch is a scene-stealer as the younger sister of Dominique Swain's lead character, who is romanced by Calvin Klein model Joel West. But it's hard to imagine the indie wafting much further than the festival circuit and some fashion of ancillary packaging.
While the dialogue is raunchy and the girls spend much of their time pursuing and connecting with an array of males, "Smokers" is pretty tame stuff when it's not careening wildly into "taboo" territory, such as the first scene set in the school's washroom and centered on tampons.
Stilted and nominally thought out in terms of cinematic possibilities, until it goes completely over-the-top in the violent and unnecessarily tragic finale, Peters' film purports to take on post-Colombine issues of fed up and victimized teenagers who are prone to self-destruct and cause harm to others in the process. There is indeed a scene in the film's middle section where the leads get a gun, don masks and attack a boy they know with the intent to rape him, but they stop before going too far.
Colorfully accessorized and chameleonic from day to day, these "Smokers" flash a nasty attitude but don't really have a revolutionary agenda. Jefferson (Swain) likes to wear big floppy hats and slinky outfits; Karen (Busy Philipps of "Freaks and Geeks") is bigger-boned and brassy; Lisa Keri Lynn Pratt) looks to be all of 13, but proves she's a party girl to be reckoned with. All three actresses appear to be having fun, but the mood is not very contagious and the writing is stuck in grade school when it comes to character development.
Younger and witchier, Jefferson's sister Lincoln (Birch) in Chicago is the source of the gun, but she's used sparingly. The gun, alas, never goes away, and with no authority keeping them back, the "Smokers" go looking for trouble and eventually regret the consequences.
While West looks great and has nothing else to do, Oliver Hudson, Nicholas M. Loeb and Ryan Browning round out the hapless group of guys who date, pine for or cross paths with the fired-up girls in a story that increasingly makes little sense.
THE SMOKERS
International Production Co.
A Kenny Golde production
Director:Christina Peters
Screenwriters:Christina Peters, Kenny Golde
Producers:Nicholas M. Loeb, Kenny Golde
Executive producers:Ted Roesgen, Quincy Jones, Michael A. Niemtzow
Director of photography:J.B. Lechtinger
Production designer:Sandra Elkind
Editor:Elias Chalhub
Costume designer:Oren Shepher
Music:Lawrence Gingold
Casting:Felicia Fasand
Color/stereo
Cast:
Jefferson:Dominique Swain
Karen:Busy Philipps
Lisa:Keri Lynn Pratt
Lincoln:Thora Birch
Jeremy:Nicholas M. Loeb
David:Oliver Hudson
Christopher:Joel West
Dan:Ryan Browning
Running time -- 95 minutes
No MPAA rating...
In their little counter-culture cell of an otherwise noneventful boarding school in Wisconsin, boys are the object and the enemy and a gun becomes the way to "change the game." Not an uncommon problem, however, the filmmakers have had a few too many puffs of movies-can-be-political-and-fun locoweed to take this one seriously.
The directorial debut of Christina Peters, who co-wrote the screenplay with producer Kenny Golde, "Smokers" unspooled with a thud at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival. Thora Birch is a scene-stealer as the younger sister of Dominique Swain's lead character, who is romanced by Calvin Klein model Joel West. But it's hard to imagine the indie wafting much further than the festival circuit and some fashion of ancillary packaging.
While the dialogue is raunchy and the girls spend much of their time pursuing and connecting with an array of males, "Smokers" is pretty tame stuff when it's not careening wildly into "taboo" territory, such as the first scene set in the school's washroom and centered on tampons.
Stilted and nominally thought out in terms of cinematic possibilities, until it goes completely over-the-top in the violent and unnecessarily tragic finale, Peters' film purports to take on post-Colombine issues of fed up and victimized teenagers who are prone to self-destruct and cause harm to others in the process. There is indeed a scene in the film's middle section where the leads get a gun, don masks and attack a boy they know with the intent to rape him, but they stop before going too far.
Colorfully accessorized and chameleonic from day to day, these "Smokers" flash a nasty attitude but don't really have a revolutionary agenda. Jefferson (Swain) likes to wear big floppy hats and slinky outfits; Karen (Busy Philipps of "Freaks and Geeks") is bigger-boned and brassy; Lisa Keri Lynn Pratt) looks to be all of 13, but proves she's a party girl to be reckoned with. All three actresses appear to be having fun, but the mood is not very contagious and the writing is stuck in grade school when it comes to character development.
Younger and witchier, Jefferson's sister Lincoln (Birch) in Chicago is the source of the gun, but she's used sparingly. The gun, alas, never goes away, and with no authority keeping them back, the "Smokers" go looking for trouble and eventually regret the consequences.
While West looks great and has nothing else to do, Oliver Hudson, Nicholas M. Loeb and Ryan Browning round out the hapless group of guys who date, pine for or cross paths with the fired-up girls in a story that increasingly makes little sense.
THE SMOKERS
International Production Co.
A Kenny Golde production
Director:Christina Peters
Screenwriters:Christina Peters, Kenny Golde
Producers:Nicholas M. Loeb, Kenny Golde
Executive producers:Ted Roesgen, Quincy Jones, Michael A. Niemtzow
Director of photography:J.B. Lechtinger
Production designer:Sandra Elkind
Editor:Elias Chalhub
Costume designer:Oren Shepher
Music:Lawrence Gingold
Casting:Felicia Fasand
Color/stereo
Cast:
Jefferson:Dominique Swain
Karen:Busy Philipps
Lisa:Keri Lynn Pratt
Lincoln:Thora Birch
Jeremy:Nicholas M. Loeb
David:Oliver Hudson
Christopher:Joel West
Dan:Ryan Browning
Running time -- 95 minutes
No MPAA rating...
- 3/20/2000
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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