Exclusive: Pacesetter Productions, the company established by Station Eleven and Black Mirror exec producer Jessica Rhoades, has teamed up with Campside Media, the company behind the Chameleon podcast franchise, to launch a new audio series.
The two companies are launching Kelly and the Satanic Panic.
The series will explore one of the most controversial cases of the 1980s that saw Kelly Michaels, a 23-year-old college student accused of Satanically abusing dozens of children in 1985 before being exonerated.
The podcast, which will launch on December 7, will feature access to Michaels. It will be hosted by Vanessa Grigoriadis, one of the co-founders of Campside, and Natalie Robehmed, who wrote the Wondery podcast WeCrashed that was later adapted for an Apple series.
Considered the Monster of Maplewood, Michaels’ case was the longest and most expensive in New Jersey history at the time, and she was convicted and sentenced to 47 years in prison. The accusations,...
The two companies are launching Kelly and the Satanic Panic.
The series will explore one of the most controversial cases of the 1980s that saw Kelly Michaels, a 23-year-old college student accused of Satanically abusing dozens of children in 1985 before being exonerated.
The podcast, which will launch on December 7, will feature access to Michaels. It will be hosted by Vanessa Grigoriadis, one of the co-founders of Campside, and Natalie Robehmed, who wrote the Wondery podcast WeCrashed that was later adapted for an Apple series.
Considered the Monster of Maplewood, Michaels’ case was the longest and most expensive in New Jersey history at the time, and she was convicted and sentenced to 47 years in prison. The accusations,...
- 11/13/2023
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Caitlyn Jenner is learning to choose her words more carefully. In a sneak peek from this Sunday's episode of I Am Cait, she sits down with Jenny Boylan, the Anna Quindlen Writer in Residence and professor of English at Barnard College of Columbia University. "It would be very attractive to me to have a guy treat me like a woman," Jenner confesses to her friend. Boylan's eyes widen in disbelief. "What does that mean?" she asks. Jenner, who came out as transgender in April, responds, "Uh, that you would be treated like a normal woman." Boylan, the national co-chair of GLAAD, is offended by that, too. She asks, "What do you mean 'a normal woman?'" Though her intention is...
- 8/27/2015
- E! Online
Jennifer Finney Boylan's sons were both younger than 10 years old when she came out as transgender - and she says her journey has made her a better parent. "Having a father who became a woman has helped my sons become better men," Boylan, 56, tells People of her now college-aged sons Zach and Sean. "They have learned that there are times when you have to be true to yourself and that you have to find the courage to do things that people will not understand or criticize." But Boylan is the first to admit it took her some time to find that courage herself.
- 2/10/2015
- by Patrick Gomez, @PatrickGomezLA
- PEOPLE.com
Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Anna Quindlen took aim at her former colleague, ex-New York Times columnist Bill Keller over a controversial column about a woman with cancer that raised a storm of criticism among readers. Speaking at an event to promote her new novel, “Still Life With Crumbs,” Quindlen responded to an audience question about Keller by saying she was “made uncomfortable” over the fact that Keller and his wife Emma Gilbey Keller wrote about “the same subject, the same woman.” Quindlen said she was further bothered about whether the cancer patient in question, Lisa Bonchek Adams, knew that Keller had written.
- 2/20/2014
- by Sharon Waxman
- The Wrap
Mary Tyler Moore: 2012 SAG Award Life Achievement Award Moore showcased her dramatic talent in her Emmy-nominated depiction of TV correspondent Betty Rollins' battle with breast cancer in the 1978 CBS telefilm First You Cry. [Photo: Mary Tyler Moore and Dick Van Dyke in the television movie The Gin Game.] In 1980 Moore was nominated for an Oscar® for her riveting portrayal of Beth Jarrett, a bitter mother coping with the death of one son and the attempted suicide of another in the Robert Redford-directed drama Ordinary People. The same year she continued to explore painful subject matter onstage in the hit Broadway play Whose Life Is It, Anyway? which earned her a Tony for playing a quadriplegic sculptor fighting to determine her own destiny, a role originated by Tom Conti and rewritten for its female star in her Broadway debut. Other feature films include: Six Weeks, opposite Dudley Moore; David O. Russell’s Flirting with Disaster; and Peter Calahan's dark comedy Against the Current, opposite Joseph Fiennes and Justin Kirk,...
- 9/8/2011
- by Steve Montgomery
- Alt Film Guide
First Run Features will release the 2010 documentary film Hey Boo: Harper Lee & To Kill A Mockingbird, a documentary on the life of the author of the renowned novel, the only book she ever wrote, on DVD on July 19.
The DVD will carry the list price of $24.95.
Gregory Peck consults with Harper Lee in the making of the film version of To Kill A Mockingbird.
After more than half a century, To Kill a Mockingbird remains one of the most important and influential American novels of the 20th Century. Originally published in 1960, the novel sells nearly one million copies each year and has been translated into more than 40 languages. The 1962 film version, meanwhile, won three Academy Awards, including a Best Actor nod for star Gregory Peck (Roman Holiday).
Directed by Mary McDonagh Murphy, Hey Boo looks at Lee’s childhood as a Southern girl named Nelle Harper Lee, her adult life,...
The DVD will carry the list price of $24.95.
Gregory Peck consults with Harper Lee in the making of the film version of To Kill A Mockingbird.
After more than half a century, To Kill a Mockingbird remains one of the most important and influential American novels of the 20th Century. Originally published in 1960, the novel sells nearly one million copies each year and has been translated into more than 40 languages. The 1962 film version, meanwhile, won three Academy Awards, including a Best Actor nod for star Gregory Peck (Roman Holiday).
Directed by Mary McDonagh Murphy, Hey Boo looks at Lee’s childhood as a Southern girl named Nelle Harper Lee, her adult life,...
- 6/22/2011
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
We largely covered the Tony Awards last night, but here’s a list of Neil Patrick Harris’ best jokes. He had a lot of them. When can we elect him our leader?
In news that seems to surprise some, but not me, the “Gay Girl In Damascus” lesbian blogger rumored to have been kidnapped never existed. It was a 40-year-old American man.
Ron Nyswaner, the gay writer behind Philadelphia, is currently producing a movie with Jesse Eisenberg and Tracy Morgan. He attempts the most insulting apologist piece about Morgan to date. There were tears? You bet there were tears, but Morgan’s don’t interest me.
Author Anna Quindlen gave the commencement address at Grinnell College, and what she said doesn’t distill well. But the heart of it seems to be that the baby boomers have destroyed America by focusing on money, but today’s youth can rebuild it.
In news that seems to surprise some, but not me, the “Gay Girl In Damascus” lesbian blogger rumored to have been kidnapped never existed. It was a 40-year-old American man.
Ron Nyswaner, the gay writer behind Philadelphia, is currently producing a movie with Jesse Eisenberg and Tracy Morgan. He attempts the most insulting apologist piece about Morgan to date. There were tears? You bet there were tears, but Morgan’s don’t interest me.
Author Anna Quindlen gave the commencement address at Grinnell College, and what she said doesn’t distill well. But the heart of it seems to be that the baby boomers have destroyed America by focusing on money, but today’s youth can rebuild it.
- 6/13/2011
- by Ed Kennedy
- The Backlot
“Masterpieces are masterpieces not because they’re flawless but they tap into something essential to us – at the heart of who we are and how we live.” Boldly taking on the recent backlash against Harper Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning classic To Kill A Mockingbird, documentarian Mary Murphy pulls together an expansive selection of interview subjects ranging from Lee’s close personal friends to political leaders to noted tastemaker Oprah Winfrey, who proudly declares Mockingbird was the first book she ever recommended, to a panoply of heralded American novelists (including Anna Quindlen, Wally Lamb and James McBride) to craft a compelling portrait of this self-proclaimed “Jane Austen of the Deep South” while exploring the impact of her groundbreaking debut. Of course there’s a noticeable absence to this impressive lineup of talking heads as the notoriously press-shy Lee hasn’t granted an interview since 1964. Admittedly, this leaves some gaps in Lee’s story,...
- 5/13/2011
- by Kristy Puchko
- The Film Stage
Mary Murphy’s Hey Boo often feels more like a celebrity book-club session than a documentary: It centers on a parade of talking-head interviewees (Oprah Winfrey, Tom Brokaw, Rosanne Cash, Wally Lamb, Anna Quindlen, James McBride, Rick Bragg, James Patterson, Scott Turow, Richard Russo, and more) who read from Lee’s 1960 novel To Kill A Mockingbird, explain their reactions to it, analyze the characters, and praise it to the heavens, with enthusiasm and personal investment, but no great insight. One segment observes children in classrooms studiously describing their favorite Mockingbird scenes, and the rest of the film feels like ...
- 5/12/2011
- avclub.com
Reviewed by Amy R. Handler
(May 2011)
Directed/Written by: Mary Murphy
Featuring: Tom Brokaw, Rosanne Cash, James McBride, Jon Meacham, Anna Quindlen, Richard Russo, Scott Turow, Oprah Winfrey and Andrew Young
Rarely do books and the films adapted from them strike such a universal chord that they’re never forgotten. Such is the legacy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the woman behind it, Nelle Harper Lee.
Two years in the writing, “To Kill a Mockingbird” was published in 1960 and maintained its status on best-seller lists for 88 weeks. In 1961 the novel received the coveted Pulitzer Prize, and three years later, its author dropped out of the public arena, never granting the press another interview again.
In her outstanding new documentary, “Hey, Boo,” filmmaker Mary Murphy takes on the daunting task of piecing together the legend that is Lee — a woman whose work affected racial tolerance and understanding in America. To accomplish this,...
(May 2011)
Directed/Written by: Mary Murphy
Featuring: Tom Brokaw, Rosanne Cash, James McBride, Jon Meacham, Anna Quindlen, Richard Russo, Scott Turow, Oprah Winfrey and Andrew Young
Rarely do books and the films adapted from them strike such a universal chord that they’re never forgotten. Such is the legacy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the woman behind it, Nelle Harper Lee.
Two years in the writing, “To Kill a Mockingbird” was published in 1960 and maintained its status on best-seller lists for 88 weeks. In 1961 the novel received the coveted Pulitzer Prize, and three years later, its author dropped out of the public arena, never granting the press another interview again.
In her outstanding new documentary, “Hey, Boo,” filmmaker Mary Murphy takes on the daunting task of piecing together the legend that is Lee — a woman whose work affected racial tolerance and understanding in America. To accomplish this,...
- 5/11/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Reviewed by Amy R. Handler
(May 2011)
Directed/Written by: Mary Murphy
Featuring: Tom Brokaw, Rosanne Cash, James McBride, Jon Meacham, Anna Quindlen, Richard Russo, Scott Turow, Oprah Winfrey and Andrew Young
Rarely do books and the films adapted from them strike such a universal chord that they’re never forgotten. Such is the legacy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the woman behind it, Nelle Harper Lee.
Two years in the writing, “To Kill a Mockingbird” was published in 1960 and maintained its status on best-seller lists for 88 weeks. In 1961 the novel received the coveted Pulitzer Prize, and three years later, its author dropped out of the public arena, never granting the press another interview again.
In her outstanding new documentary, “Hey, Boo,” filmmaker Mary Murphy takes on the daunting task of piecing together the legend that is Lee — a woman whose work affected racial tolerance and understanding in America. To accomplish this,...
(May 2011)
Directed/Written by: Mary Murphy
Featuring: Tom Brokaw, Rosanne Cash, James McBride, Jon Meacham, Anna Quindlen, Richard Russo, Scott Turow, Oprah Winfrey and Andrew Young
Rarely do books and the films adapted from them strike such a universal chord that they’re never forgotten. Such is the legacy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” and the woman behind it, Nelle Harper Lee.
Two years in the writing, “To Kill a Mockingbird” was published in 1960 and maintained its status on best-seller lists for 88 weeks. In 1961 the novel received the coveted Pulitzer Prize, and three years later, its author dropped out of the public arena, never granting the press another interview again.
In her outstanding new documentary, “Hey, Boo,” filmmaker Mary Murphy takes on the daunting task of piecing together the legend that is Lee — a woman whose work affected racial tolerance and understanding in America. To accomplish this,...
- 5/11/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Opens at New York.s Quad Cinema & Los Angeles. Laemmle Theatres on May 13
First Run Features will release Hey, Boo: Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird fifty years after the novel was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction on May 4, 1961.This documentary film by Mary McDonagh Murphy explores the phenomenon To Kill a Mockingbird became and unravels some of the mysteries around the novelist.s life, including why she never published again.
Harper Lee.s first and only novel, To Kill a Mockingbird was instantly a beloved classic. The film version, starring Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch, won a trio of Academy Awards. Luminaries like Tom Brokaw list the novel among their all-time favorite books, and Oprah Winfrey calls it .our national novel.. It is still required reading in most classrooms and sells nearly a million copies every year.many more than The Catcher in the Rye, The Great Gatsby...
First Run Features will release Hey, Boo: Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird fifty years after the novel was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction on May 4, 1961.This documentary film by Mary McDonagh Murphy explores the phenomenon To Kill a Mockingbird became and unravels some of the mysteries around the novelist.s life, including why she never published again.
Harper Lee.s first and only novel, To Kill a Mockingbird was instantly a beloved classic. The film version, starring Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch, won a trio of Academy Awards. Luminaries like Tom Brokaw list the novel among their all-time favorite books, and Oprah Winfrey calls it .our national novel.. It is still required reading in most classrooms and sells nearly a million copies every year.many more than The Catcher in the Rye, The Great Gatsby...
- 3/17/2011
- by Melissa Howland
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Icm's Amanda "Binky" Urban is the first book agent to be selected to receive the Maxwell E. Perkins Award for Distinguished Achievement in Fiction. The prize, created in 2005 by The Center For Fiction, is awarded to editors, publishers or agents who've championed and nurtured fiction authors. Urban has repped a long list of fiction writers that include Richard Ford, E.L. Doctorow, Anna Quindlen, Cormac McCarthy, Jay McInerney, Toni Morrison, David and Nic Sheff, E.B. White and Haruki Murakami. With her West Coast Icm counterpart Ron Bernstein, Urban has been involved in a slew of book-to-movie movie transfers that include the [...]...
- 7/9/2010
- by MIKE FLEMING
- Deadline
New York -- Honorees such as Tina Fey, Sheryl Crow and Gayle King along with presenters like Oprah Winfrey, Katie Couric, Maria Bartiromo, Mariska Hargitay and Seth Meyers came together Monday at the 40th annual Matrix Awards, organized by New York Women in Communications.The ceremony at the jam-packed Waldorf Astoria Hotel, sponsored by NBC Universal, was emceed by "NBC Nightly News" anchor and managing editor Brian Williams."There is an elephant in the room," Williams quipped in his opening monologue. "I don't know why a man is hosting this luncheon." He then added someone had suggested he should blame the volcano in Iceland, which also kept New York Women in Communications president Denise Warren from getting back to New York for the luncheon.He also earned laughs when he welcomed NBC Universal chairman and CEO Jeff Zucker as a "veteran non-woman."Katie Couric, who was among the presenters, later...
- 4/19/2010
- backstage.com
New York -- Honorees such as Tina Fey, Sheryl Crow and Gayle King along with presenters like Oprah Winfrey, Katie Couric, Maria Bartiromo, Mariska Hargitay and Seth Meyers came together Monday at the 40th annual Matrix Awards, organized by New York Women in Communications.
The ceremony at the jam-packed Waldorf Astoria Hotel, sponsored by NBC Universal, was emceed by "NBC Nightly News" anchor and managing editor Brian Williams.
"There is an elephant in the room," Williams quipped in his opening monologue. "I don't know why a man is hosting this luncheon." He then added someone had suggested he should blame the volcano in Iceland, which also kept New York Women in Communications president Denise Warren from getting back to New York for the luncheon.
He also earned laughs when he welcomed NBC Universal chairman and CEO Jeff Zucker as a "veteran non-woman."
Katie Couric, who was among the presenters, later...
The ceremony at the jam-packed Waldorf Astoria Hotel, sponsored by NBC Universal, was emceed by "NBC Nightly News" anchor and managing editor Brian Williams.
"There is an elephant in the room," Williams quipped in his opening monologue. "I don't know why a man is hosting this luncheon." He then added someone had suggested he should blame the volcano in Iceland, which also kept New York Women in Communications president Denise Warren from getting back to New York for the luncheon.
He also earned laughs when he welcomed NBC Universal chairman and CEO Jeff Zucker as a "veteran non-woman."
Katie Couric, who was among the presenters, later...
- 4/19/2010
- by By Georg Szalai
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
E.L. Doctorow has done it: written a Great American Novel with his classic Ragtime. Does he make the same magic happen with his new, 1930s-set New York novel Homer and Langley? E.L. Doctorow in conversation with Anna Quindlen The Barnes and Noble in Union Square is simply killing it in the next two weeks: Nick Cave, Lorrie Moore, and David Byrne are just some of the names that are stopping by there to talk about their new books. But we're most excited for E.L. Doctorow chatting up his new book, Homer and Langley. Like his masterpiece Ragtime, Homer and Langley is a historically-based novel following the true story of the reclusive Collyer brothers. It should be fascinating to see how Doctorow's facility with language and history translates in person. Where: Barnes and Noble Union Square, 33 East 17th Street When: Tuesday, September 15, 7:00 pm Price: Free! If you have a suggestion for this column,...
- 9/14/2009
- TribecaFilm.com
CBS is counting its Blessings, reteaming with Emmy winner Mary Tyler Moore for an original movie based on Anna Quindlen's best-selling novel. Blessings, from the Sanitsky Co., centers on reclusive heiress Lydia Blessing (Moore), whose live-in ex-con handyman finds an abandoned baby by his garage apartment on her vast family estate. He decides to raise the baby by himself, but Blessing soon discovers his secret, and the three form a loving temporary family.
- 5/12/2003
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Returning home to live with one's parents is a potential nightmare for most ambitious adults, but the protagonist in Carl Franklin's new film is obligated because her mother has cancer and her busy, important dad needs help. In fact, he needs a lot more, starting with forgiveness -- or at least tolerance -- for his philandering ways and cold, detached persona, even in the face of tragedy.
Universal's prestigious release starring Oscar winners Meryl Streep and William Hurt, with Renee Zellweger playing the lead, needs a lot of help too. But critical reception for Franklin's subdued adaptation of Anna Quindlen's novel is not likely to be true-blue, and audiences are unlikely to support "One True Thing" beyond an initial flurry of interest in major markets. Women in the mood for a good weeper may boost boxoffice and ancillary-market returns over time.
A full-out, nose-blowing, hanky-soaking experience it will be for some, while others will remain unmoved -- though the sight of Zellweger scrunching her face in sadness is nearly impossible to watch without a sympathetic whimper or two. A fairly routine family drama elevated to Hollywood event by the presence of Streep and Hurt, "One True Thing" seems bucking to become the all-time "Mom's dying" movie.
Unfortunately, there's a distracting, ultimately pointless framing device, with the duplicitous Ellen Gulden (Zellweger) snookering a district attorney (James Eckhouse) about her family dynamics. Franklin and screenwriter Karen Croner keep secret why Ellen's under the law's gaze but have no trouble letting us know that her mother's expiration is a bit of a mystery.
Several times, the film returns to the gentle grilling of Ellen to fill narrative holes, but one is never engaged by the gambit. Taking place in the late 1980s, the story flashes back to a surprise party for professor and intellectual George (Hurt), engineered by full-of-cheer, slightly daffy Kate (Streep).
Streep's mom is strong in the ways of a woman who has raised kids and sent them into the world, joined social clubs and kept a happy face during the long, winding road of marriage to a driven, demanding mate who cheats on her with his younger, no-doubt-boneheaded students. Who wouldn't be sympathetic to her plight, despite her occasional blowups and denial?
Ellen's brother Brian Tom Everett Scott) is not integrated much into the scenario and basically serves to show again what a rotten dad George is. Brian is flunking out of Harvard and has no professorial ambitions -- what a jerk George is to expect his species to multiply. But hot-shot New York magazine journalist Ellen's tenuous hold on a career is even more a generic distraction, starting with hard-to-please George giving her the same cliched advice he has given all those adoring pupils for decades.
Filling out the overlong movie are sundry subplots and atmospheric disturbances. But when cancer treatments start and Kate goes downhill fast, the movie goes for all the fleeting mom-and-daughter moments with a vengeance.
Nothing special visually and a bit too cloying for the usually more rugged Franklin, "True" is admirably earnest but hardly an important addition to his resume.
ONE TRUE THING
Universal Pictures
A Monarch Pictures/Upland production
A Carl Franklin film
Credits: Director: Carl Franklin; Screenwriter: Karen Croner; Producers: Jesse Beaton, Harry Ufland; Executive producers: William W. Wilson III, Leslie Morgan; Director of photography: Declan Quinn; Production designer: Paul Peters; Editor: Carole Kravetz; Costume designer: Donna Zakowska; Music: Cliff Eidelman; Casting: Rick Pagano. Cast: Kate Gulden: Meryl Streep; Ellen Gulden: Renee Zellweger; George Gulden: William Hurt; Brian Gulden: Tom Everett Scott; Jules: Lauren Graham; Jordan Belzer: Nicky Katt; District Attorney: James Eckhouse; Mr. Tweedy: Patrick Breen. MPAA rating: R. Color/stereo. Running time -- 127 minutes...
Universal's prestigious release starring Oscar winners Meryl Streep and William Hurt, with Renee Zellweger playing the lead, needs a lot of help too. But critical reception for Franklin's subdued adaptation of Anna Quindlen's novel is not likely to be true-blue, and audiences are unlikely to support "One True Thing" beyond an initial flurry of interest in major markets. Women in the mood for a good weeper may boost boxoffice and ancillary-market returns over time.
A full-out, nose-blowing, hanky-soaking experience it will be for some, while others will remain unmoved -- though the sight of Zellweger scrunching her face in sadness is nearly impossible to watch without a sympathetic whimper or two. A fairly routine family drama elevated to Hollywood event by the presence of Streep and Hurt, "One True Thing" seems bucking to become the all-time "Mom's dying" movie.
Unfortunately, there's a distracting, ultimately pointless framing device, with the duplicitous Ellen Gulden (Zellweger) snookering a district attorney (James Eckhouse) about her family dynamics. Franklin and screenwriter Karen Croner keep secret why Ellen's under the law's gaze but have no trouble letting us know that her mother's expiration is a bit of a mystery.
Several times, the film returns to the gentle grilling of Ellen to fill narrative holes, but one is never engaged by the gambit. Taking place in the late 1980s, the story flashes back to a surprise party for professor and intellectual George (Hurt), engineered by full-of-cheer, slightly daffy Kate (Streep).
Streep's mom is strong in the ways of a woman who has raised kids and sent them into the world, joined social clubs and kept a happy face during the long, winding road of marriage to a driven, demanding mate who cheats on her with his younger, no-doubt-boneheaded students. Who wouldn't be sympathetic to her plight, despite her occasional blowups and denial?
Ellen's brother Brian Tom Everett Scott) is not integrated much into the scenario and basically serves to show again what a rotten dad George is. Brian is flunking out of Harvard and has no professorial ambitions -- what a jerk George is to expect his species to multiply. But hot-shot New York magazine journalist Ellen's tenuous hold on a career is even more a generic distraction, starting with hard-to-please George giving her the same cliched advice he has given all those adoring pupils for decades.
Filling out the overlong movie are sundry subplots and atmospheric disturbances. But when cancer treatments start and Kate goes downhill fast, the movie goes for all the fleeting mom-and-daughter moments with a vengeance.
Nothing special visually and a bit too cloying for the usually more rugged Franklin, "True" is admirably earnest but hardly an important addition to his resume.
ONE TRUE THING
Universal Pictures
A Monarch Pictures/Upland production
A Carl Franklin film
Credits: Director: Carl Franklin; Screenwriter: Karen Croner; Producers: Jesse Beaton, Harry Ufland; Executive producers: William W. Wilson III, Leslie Morgan; Director of photography: Declan Quinn; Production designer: Paul Peters; Editor: Carole Kravetz; Costume designer: Donna Zakowska; Music: Cliff Eidelman; Casting: Rick Pagano. Cast: Kate Gulden: Meryl Streep; Ellen Gulden: Renee Zellweger; George Gulden: William Hurt; Brian Gulden: Tom Everett Scott; Jules: Lauren Graham; Jordan Belzer: Nicky Katt; District Attorney: James Eckhouse; Mr. Tweedy: Patrick Breen. MPAA rating: R. Color/stereo. Running time -- 127 minutes...
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