Studiocanal has boarded “A Prophet,” a new television adaptation of Jacques Audiard’s acclaimed 2009 film. The eight-episode limited series started filming on July 3, with “Django” director Enrico Maria Artale and a diverse new cast led by Mamadou Sidibé.
The French-language series brings back the award-winning team behind the original film, including creators and writers Abdel Raouf Dafri and Nicolas Peufaillit (“The Returned”), as well as producer Marco Cherqui (“Savages”), in agreement with “A Prophet” producers Why Not Productions and Page 114.
The show, which is filming in Marseille and Puglia, Italy, is produced by Cherqui and Sebastien Janin, former Apple exec and co-founder of Media Musketeers, and co-produced by Ugc, Orange Studio, Entourage Series and Savon Noir, with the participation of Ocs. The key crew includes “Gomorra” cinematographer Ferran Paredes Rubio. Veteran Italian producer Fabio Conversi (“Youth”) is exec producing the series.
The original movie won the grand jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival,...
The French-language series brings back the award-winning team behind the original film, including creators and writers Abdel Raouf Dafri and Nicolas Peufaillit (“The Returned”), as well as producer Marco Cherqui (“Savages”), in agreement with “A Prophet” producers Why Not Productions and Page 114.
The show, which is filming in Marseille and Puglia, Italy, is produced by Cherqui and Sebastien Janin, former Apple exec and co-founder of Media Musketeers, and co-produced by Ugc, Orange Studio, Entourage Series and Savon Noir, with the participation of Ocs. The key crew includes “Gomorra” cinematographer Ferran Paredes Rubio. Veteran Italian producer Fabio Conversi (“Youth”) is exec producing the series.
The original movie won the grand jury prize at the Cannes Film Festival,...
- 7/10/2023
- by Elsa Keslassy
- Variety Film + TV
For some films, it just takes a while to find a home.
That’s the case with the new film from director Edorardo de Angelis, a delightful little film entitled Indivisible.
Originally debuting at the Venice International Film Festival not this year but in 2016, de Angelis’ film introduces us to Dasy and Viola, two gorgeous young women who happen to not only be talented crooners, but also conjoined twins. A hit at various small scale local gatherings, the dynamic duo are ostensibly the primary source of income for their family, including their dickhead of a father who sees them as much as his daughters as he does a collective gimmick to be peddled to families for baptisms or young men to win the heart of a lover.
The pair, however, finds hope (at first) in the promises of not only freedom from their father’s shackles but from the physical...
That’s the case with the new film from director Edorardo de Angelis, a delightful little film entitled Indivisible.
Originally debuting at the Venice International Film Festival not this year but in 2016, de Angelis’ film introduces us to Dasy and Viola, two gorgeous young women who happen to not only be talented crooners, but also conjoined twins. A hit at various small scale local gatherings, the dynamic duo are ostensibly the primary source of income for their family, including their dickhead of a father who sees them as much as his daughters as he does a collective gimmick to be peddled to families for baptisms or young men to win the heart of a lover.
The pair, however, finds hope (at first) in the promises of not only freedom from their father’s shackles but from the physical...
- 9/15/2017
- by Joshua Brunsting
- CriterionCast
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