"Do you feel sorry about what you did?" The Orchard has debuted the official trailer for an indie drama titled Savage Youth, which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival last year and stopped by a few other small festivals. The second feature from director Michael Curtis Johnson, Savage Youth is set in small town America following a group of young people. Based on a true story, six young lives collide in the most horrific and twisted of ways. Described as a "brutal examination of doomed youth exiled to society's edge." The film stars Grace Victoria Cox, Tequan Richmond, Will Brittain, Chloe Levine, Mitchell Edwards, J. Michael Trautmann, and Sasha Feldman. Looks like yet another forgettable kids-are-crazy indie flick. Here's the official trailer (+ poster) for Michael Curtis Johnson's Savage Youth, direct from YouTube: The lives of six troubled teens in a racially-divided town take a violent turn when drugs and broken hearts intermix.
- 3/21/2019
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Six episodes were provided for review prior to broadcast.
For nearly every character in Get Shorty, doom takes the form of a past decision: one filmmaker is still haunted by the failure of his dream project, and a mobster, who eventually becomes that man’s partner, is unable to start a new life because he can’t cut his criminal ties. Both of these experiences provide ample support to the show’s sentiment, but honestly, they’re nothing new. How is it possible that a show I feel like I’ve seen before can still be so riveting?
Miles Daly (Chris O’Dowd) is the mobster. A big Irish guy working as the muscle for a small Nevadan syndicate, he looks like he should belong in the “all brawn, no brain” category – those who underestimate him put him there. But as we can tell from the way he watches movies with his daughter,...
For nearly every character in Get Shorty, doom takes the form of a past decision: one filmmaker is still haunted by the failure of his dream project, and a mobster, who eventually becomes that man’s partner, is unable to start a new life because he can’t cut his criminal ties. Both of these experiences provide ample support to the show’s sentiment, but honestly, they’re nothing new. How is it possible that a show I feel like I’ve seen before can still be so riveting?
Miles Daly (Chris O’Dowd) is the mobster. A big Irish guy working as the muscle for a small Nevadan syndicate, he looks like he should belong in the “all brawn, no brain” category – those who underestimate him put him there. But as we can tell from the way he watches movies with his daughter,...
- 8/9/2017
- by Luke Parker
- We Got This Covered
Powers – the comic book show from PlayStation, with Sharlto Copley – got off to a shaky start. Thankfully, it improved over time…
Warning: this article begins spoiler-free for those yet to watch Powers, but features signposted spoilers later on.
If you’ve clicked on this article purely out of intrigue, let's start by filling you in on a few details before getting into the nitty gritty of Powers. This TV show (produced by Sony and aired exclusively on PlayStation) is an adaptation of a fantastically enjoyable series of comic books penned by Brian Michael Bendis (best known, arguably, for inventing the Ultimate Marvel universe) and drawn by Michael Avon Oeming (who also has lots of Marvel on his CV, as well as the Bluntman And Chronic comics).
Christian Walker and Deena Pilgrim are the books’ protagonists - an experienced detective and his new partner, based in a fictionalised Chicago stuffed full...
Warning: this article begins spoiler-free for those yet to watch Powers, but features signposted spoilers later on.
If you’ve clicked on this article purely out of intrigue, let's start by filling you in on a few details before getting into the nitty gritty of Powers. This TV show (produced by Sony and aired exclusively on PlayStation) is an adaptation of a fantastically enjoyable series of comic books penned by Brian Michael Bendis (best known, arguably, for inventing the Ultimate Marvel universe) and drawn by Michael Avon Oeming (who also has lots of Marvel on his CV, as well as the Bluntman And Chronic comics).
Christian Walker and Deena Pilgrim are the books’ protagonists - an experienced detective and his new partner, based in a fictionalised Chicago stuffed full...
- 5/17/2015
- by rleane
- Den of Geek
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