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brian-in-finance · 10 months
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Judi Dench to receive IFTA Lifetime Achievement Award in Dublin
The Irish Film & Television Academy (IFTA), which celebrates 20 years this year, will present Oscar-winning actress Judi Dench with the Irish Academy Lifetime Achievement Award in recognition of her outstanding contribution to the world of film and television. She will receive the award and take part in a very special in conversation hosted by Deirdre O’Kane at the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin on Thursday, 6th July 2023, supported by Fís Éireann/Screen Ireland though the Screen Stakeholders Funding Scheme.
From Shakespearean stage roles to iconic film performances, Dame Judi Dench is one of the world’s most versatile and respected actors, with an illustrious career that spans over six decades. Beloved by her peers and public alike, her performances have earned her awards and accolades across the globe. She is an Oscar winner with a further seven Oscar Nominations, ten BAFTA awards, two SAG Awards and two Golden Globes to her name for her screen performances. She has also won a Tony Award and seven Olivier Awards for her theatrical work.
This special Irish Academy Lifetime Achievement Award recognises Dame Judi's body of work and her remarkable achievements. Known for her extraordinary ability to command the screen in both leading and supporting roles, she has for decades been one of the most in-demand actors working and brings enormous prestige to any project she is involved in.
Dame Judi was born in York with both of her parents having grown up in Dublin. Her mother was born in Ireland and her father born in the UK. Her parents met while studying at Trinity College. She has remained connected to her Irish heritage both personally and professionally over the many years, and brought enormous depth and empathy to her performance in Irish films Philomena and Belfast. She has collaborated with many Irish screen talent over the years including Ciaran Hinds, Kenneth Branagh, Caitriona Balfe, Jamie Dornan, Charlie Murphy, Jessie Buckley, Chris O'Dowd, Daniel Day Lewis and Michael Fassbender.
Dame Judi Dench expressed how honoured she feels to be acknowledged here in Ireland for her body of work, and said:
It's especially wonderful for me to receive this Lifetime Achievement Award from the Irish Film and Television Academy, as my family are from Ireland and it gives me a wonderful excuse to return to Dublin…
Áine Moriarty, Chief Executive of IFTA, said:
It’s such an honour to pay tribute to Judi Dench and to celebrate her extraordinary talent, work and career. Judi is a master of her craft; the breadth and variety of her work on stage and screen has solidified her as one of the most respected and iconic actors of her generation. We look forward to hosting this special event with Judi and presenting her with the Irish Academy Lifetime Achievement Award here in Dublin, the city where her parents grew up.
The event will be a celebration of her achievements and a moment to recognize her indelible connections with Ireland and the Irish screen industry.
Previous recipients of the IFTA Lifetime Achievement Awards include, for example, Irish icons such as Maureen O’Hara, Gabriel Byrne, Jim Sheridan, Liam Neeson, Fionnula Flanagan and Joan Bergin, and international recipients of IFTA’s special John Ford Award have included Martin Scorsese and Clint Eastwood.
Screen Ireland
Remember when IFTA announced Dame Judi’s Lifetime Achievement Award?
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now-watching · 6 years
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“Philomena” (2013), dir. Stephen Frears
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king-galaxius · 4 years
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2019 Irish Film of the Day
2019 Irish Film of the Day
Movie: Dark Lies the Island Writer: Kevin Barry Director: Ian Fitzgibbon Genre: Comedy, Drama
Cast: Peter Coonan, Pat Shortt, Moe Dunford, Charlie Murphy(Philomena), Tommy Tiernan, John Quinn, and Jana Mohieden.
Reference: filmireland.net/2019/
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aion-rsa · 3 years
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Best New Movies on Netflix in March 2021
https://ift.tt/eA8V8J
The month of March signals a grim milestone with it being roughly one year since COVID-19 shut movie theaters down around the world. And 12 months later, going to a cinema remains a risky proposition. However, the comfort of Netflix is still providing a safe alternative for the quarantine-bound.
Here’s a handful of new cinematic gems coming to a streaming service near you.
Batman Begins (2005)
March 1
Christopher Nolan‘s Batman origin story breathed new life into the Dark Knight in 2005 after Batman & Robin killed the movie franchise eight years earlier. Christian Bale, who gained more muscle than he probably needed for the role, turns in an excellent performance as both the troubled billionaire and the Caped Crusader. Along for the ride are Michael Caine as the definitive version of Alfred Pennyworth on the big screen, as well as Liam Neeson as Ra’s al Ghul, Gary Oldman as Jim Gordon, and Katie Holmes as love interest Rachel Dawes. Featuring plenty of twists and turns, a few spooky scenes with the Scarecrow (Cillian Murphy), and a deep-dive into the mind of a haunted man on a mission to save his decaying city, Batman Begins plants many of the seeds of brilliance that would fully bloom in its follow-up.
Crazy, Stupid, Love. (2011)
March 1
Hitting its 10-year anniversary in a few months, Glenn Ficarra and John Requa’s Crazy, Stupid, Love. still feels like a rom-com from a different era. With its laid back demeanor, and generally laconic grooving on a plot about a player (Ryan Gosling) helping a middle-aged divorced schmuck (Steve Carell) get back on his feet, this goes down more like a star vehicle from five decades ago. Yet the piece is as effortlessly appealing as Gosling’s too-cool-for-school energy, elevating the movie over screenwriter Dan Fogelman’s more recent dramedies, such as This is Us. Plus, hey, it’s also the first movie to realize Gosling and Emma Stone have like crazy good chemistry.
Dances with Wolves (1990)
March 1
Kevin Costner’s Oscar winner is somewhat haunted by its little gold statues for Best Picture and Director, which it won over Martin Scorsese’s Goodfellas. However, there is still an excellent Western here that captured audiences’ imaginations in 1990 for a reason. The story of a U.S. Cavalry officer who becomes enamored with and then assimilated by a community of Lakota Native Americans, Dances with Wolves has a sweeping majesty that’s as immersive as John Barry’s score. It can be rightly criticized for embracing “white savior” tropes, but Costner’s movie still has the good grace to put performances like Graham Greene’s front and center.
The Dark Knight (2008)
March 1
Fans critical of Heath Ledger’s casting as the Joker quickly switched to praising the late actor when The Dark Knight hit theaters in 2008. A true agent of chaos, this Joker puts Bale’s Batman and his allies through a gauntlet of capers, assassination attempts, and pain. Even district attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart), the city’s very own white knight, can’t resist the Joker’s corrupting influence as the clown lays siege to Gotham. A story about how far you’ll go to get justice, and how long a functioning society can withstand that pressure, The Dark Knight plays more like a serious crime drama (with Batman flying off rooftops on occasion, of course) than a traditional superhero romp. At a time when superhero movies were still better known for punching and tights, Nolan sought to say something more with the genre. 
Rain Man (1988)
March 1
Barry Levinson’s 1988 road trip drama cleaned up at the Oscars when it was released, bagging Best Picture, Director, Original Screenplay, and Best Actor for Dustin Hoffman. It’s often held up as creating the stereotype of the “autistic savant,” but this drama which sees selfish douchebag Charlie (Tom Cruise) travel across America with Raymond (Hoffman), the brother he didn’t know he had but who is now unexpectedly the sole inheritor of their father’s fortune, still stands up as a character piece that tugs at the heartstrings. If nothing else, it’s a highly quotable cultural phenomenon and a showcase of actors at the top of their game.
Training Day (2001)
March 1
Here is a film so good that its influence still lingers over pop culture to this day, even if no one quite remembers why Denzel Washington is saying King Kong ain’t got shit on him. Back in 2001, it catapulted Washington to his second Oscar, this time in the leading man category thanks to the role of Alonzo, a crooked cop who takes rookie Jake (Ethan Hawke) under his wing and (seemingly) into his vices. It’s a gritty crime thriller anchored by two strong performances, including Washington at his showiest. In fact, he’s so good at elevating this movie that it sometimes feels like director Antoine Fuqua and screenwriter David Ayer have been unsuccessfully trying to duplicate it ever since.
Audrey (2020)
March 14
Audrey Hepburn so effortlessly inhabits the screen that for generations of movie lovers, she seemed unreal—a symbol of style and glamour whose feet were never meant to touch earthly clay. This, however, misses the remarkableness of her life’s journey, from starving conditions under Nazi occupation in the Netherlands during her adolescence—informing her unique frame for the rest of her life—to eventually using those unspoken memories of atrocity as the foundation to become a human rights activist late in life. In between, she had a brief Hollywood career stacked with high fashion and a shockingly high quotient of classics. In fact, she became a new image for femininity in the mid-20th century. Audrey is a somewhat rose-tinted documentary about all of this, but for those who would like to know more, it’s a lovely place to start.
Philomena (2013)
March 22
A sweet, powerful, and decidedly underrated gem, Stephen Frears’ Philomena provides a gentle touch to the true life story of Philomena Lee, a woman who spent 50 years looking for the child she was forced to give up to adoption. But even “forced” is perhaps too easy a word since in her native Ireland, she was more or less incarcerated at a convent after becoming pregnant at the age of 18, with nuns sending the child away to parts unknown without her consent. Philomena now tracks the final months of her search as an older woman through the prism of a two-hander between Judi Dench as Philomena and Steve Coogan as Martin Sixsmith, the journalist who told her story and inspired the film. It makes for a surprisingly warm and affectionate road movie.
At Eternity’s Gate (2018)
March 31
At Eternity’s Gate is far from the only film about the life of Vincent van Gogh and it isn’t the best (shout out to Lust For Life, Loving Vincent, and that one episode of Doctor Who), but it’s still worth a watch—especially for fans of the Dutch painter. With Willem Dafoe as van Gogh, Oscar Isaac as Paul Gaugin, and Mads Mikkelsen as “The Priest,” the 2018 biopic would be worth it for the performances alone. But director and artist Julian Schnabel (The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Basquiat) further elevates what is a pretty straight-forward story (albeit with a controversial ending) about the painter’s final, prolific days in the French countryside into a visually vivid and emotionally affecting tale about the joys and struggles of creative compulsion.
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The post Best New Movies on Netflix in March 2021 appeared first on Den of Geek.
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maisqueumfilme · 7 years
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Jackie Chan e Pierce Brosnan dominam os novos cartazes individuais de O Estrangeiro [2017].
Após a morte de sua filha em um atentado político, um empresário decide buscar vingança  e inicia um jogo de gato e rato com um funcionário do governo britânico, cujo passado pode ter pistas sobre a identidade dos assassinos.
Também estrelam Charlie Murphy (Philomena [2013]), Katie Leung (Harry Potter e o Cálice de Fogo [2005]), Rory Fleck Byrne (A Marca do Medo [2014]), Simon Kunz (Ponto Final: Match Point [2005]), Pippa Bennett-Warner (The Smoke [2014]), Stephen Hogan (The Tudors [2008]) e Dermot Crowley (Luther [2010 - 2015]).
Baseado no livro The Chinaman, de Stephen Leather, o filme tem direção de Martin Campbell (007 - Cassino Royale [2006]) e roteiro de David Marconi (Inimigos do Estado [1998]).
Previsto para estrear no Brasil em 30 de novembro.
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londontheatre · 6 years
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The Lieutenant of Inishmore – Aidan Turner by Johan Persson
MGC today announce the full casting for Michael Grandage’s production of Martin McDonagh’s The Lieutenant of Inishmore which opens at the Noël Coward Theatre on 4th July, with previews from 23rd June and runs until 8th September. Joining Aidan Turner (Padraic) completing the all Irish cast are Denis Conway (Donny), Will Irvine (Christy), Brian Martin (James), Daryl McCormack (Brendan) Julian Moore-Cook (Joey), Charlie Murphy (Mairead), and Chris Walley (Davey).
The Lieutenant of Inishmore joins Grandage’s production of John Logan’s Red with Alfred Molina and Alfred Enoch in the West End. Red opens at the Wyndham’s Theatre on 15 May, with previews from 4 May, and runs until 28 July.
The plays have over 40,000 seats at just £10 – 25% of the total capacity, continuing the company’s unique access policy and its commitment to developing new audiences.
Who knocked Mad Padraic’s cat over on a lonely road on the island of Inishmore and was it an accident? He’ll want to know when he gets back from a stint of torture and chip-shop bombing in Northern Ireland: he loves that cat more than life itself.
Martin McDonagh is an award-winning writer and director. His plays are The Beauty Queen of Leenane, A Skull in Connemara, The Lonesome West, The Lieutenant of Inishmore, The Cripple of Inishmaan, The Pillowman, A Behanding in Spokane, Hangmen and the upcoming A Very Very Very Dark Matter. As a writer and director for film his credits are Seven Psychopaths, In Bruges, Six Shooter as well as Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri – which won four Golden Globes including Best Drama Motion Picture and Best Screenplay of a Motion Picture, and Best Screenplay at the Venice Film Festival, the Grolsch People’s Choice Award at the Toronto Film Festival and was the closing film at this year’s BFI London Film Festival.
Denis Conway plays Donny. His theatre work includes The Death of Harry Leon, Myrmidons, Making History (Ouroboros Theatre Company), Wallenstein (Chichester Festival Theatre), The Walworth Farce (Druid Theatre and National Theatre), and Homelands, The Recruiting Officer, A Cry from Heaven and The Wild Duck (Abbey Theatre, Dublin). His television work includes Single Handed, The Running Mate, Hide and Seek, Showbands, The Clinic and The Return; and for film, Garage, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Tiger’s Tail, Alexander the Great, Borstal Boy and Michael Collins.
Will Irvine plays Christy. His recent theatre work includes End Of (Dublin Fringe), Lady Chatterley’s Lover (ETT), Inkheart, Angel Meadow (Home), The Nether (Royal Court Theatre & Headlong) and Pentecost (Lyric Theatre Belfast). His television work includes Will, Centenary, Legends, Charlie, Vikings, Titanic: Blood and Steel, The Clinic and The Tudors; and for film, Dublin Old School, Born a King, The Current War, Maze and The Alarms.
Brian Martin plays James. For Shakespeare’s Globe his work includes Boudica, The Merchant of Venice (also national and international tour), Sunday Sonnets and Titus Andronicus. His other theatre work includes Snapshot (Hope Theatre), Damned by Despair, Juno and the Paycock (National Theatre), Stars in the Morning Sky (Belgrade Theatre Coventry) and The Wake and Macbeth (Abbey Theatre).
Daryl McCormack plays Brendan. His theatre work includes The Voice Factor X (New Dublin Theatre), Enjoy (Rough Magic), Othello (Theatre Royal), Romeo and Juliet (Gate Theatre Dublin) and The Grapes of Wrath (Project Arts Centre). For television, his work includes A Very English Scandal, Immortality, Dawn, Fair City and Vikings; and for film, A Good Woman is Hard to Find and The Randomer.
Julian Moore-Cook plays Joey. His theatre work includes Mother Courage and Her Children (Southwark Playhouse), Three Sisters (Lyric Theatre Belfast), Rolling Stone (Orange Tree Theatre), Twelfth Night (Iris Theatre), Obamamerica (Theatre503), Our American Cousin (Finborough Theatre) and Beyond Caring (The Yard Theatre). His television work includes Benidorm (as series regular Callum) and 24: Die Another Day; and for film, Mission Impossible 5.
Charlie Murphy plays Mairead. Her theatre work includes Arlington (St Ann’s Warehouse and Galway International Arts Festival), Big Maggie (Druid Theatre), Disco Pigs (Young Vic), Pygmalion (National Theatre of Ireland – Best Actress Irish Times Theatre Award), The Silver Tassie (Druid Theatre and Lincoln Center) and The Colleen Bawn and This is Our Youth (Bedrock Theatre). For television, her work includes Peaky Blinders, Happy Valley, Rebellion, To Walk Invisible, The Last Kingdom, The Village, Quirke, Ripper Street, Misfits and Love/Hate for which she twice won the Best Actress Award at the Irish Film and Television Awards; and for film, Dark Lies the Island, The Foreigner, ’71, Northmen – A Viking Saga and Philomena.
Aidan Turner plays Padraic. His theatre work includes The Plough and The Stars, Romeo and Juliet and A Cry from Heaven (Abbey Theatre Dublin), Cyrano and Titus Andronicus (Project Arts Centre). For television, his work includes The Clinic, Being Human, Desperate Romantics, Hattie and as the title role in Poldark, now in its 4th series; and for film, The Hobbit trilogy of films, The Mortal Instruments, The Secret Scripture, Loving Vincent and the forthcoming Look Away and The Man Who Killed Hitler and then the Bigfoot. He was named GQ Actor of the Year for 2016 and Radio Times’s Most Popular UK Actor in 2015, 2016 and 2017.
Chris Walley plays Davey. This production marks Walley’s professional stage debut, following training at RADA. His film work includes The Young Offenders.
Michael Grandage is Artistic Director of the Michael Grandage Company in London. For the company he directed Photograph 51, Dawn French: 30 Million Minutes, Henry V, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Cripple of Inishmaan, Peter and Alice and Privates on Parade, and the feature film Genius. He was Artistic Director of the Donmar Warehouse (2002–2012) and Artistic Director of Sheffield Theatres (2000–05). He is the recipient of Tony, Drama Desk, Olivier, Evening Standard, Critics’ Circle and South Bank Awards. He has been awarded Honorary Doctorates by the University of London, Sheffield University and Sheffield Hallam University and is President of Central School of Speech and Drama. He was appointed CBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours 2011. His book, A Decade At The Donmar, was published by Constable & Robins in 2012. His work for the Donmar Warehouse includes directing Eddie Redmayne in Richard II, Felicity Jones in Luise Miller, Derek Jacobi in King Lear, Red (also New York, Tony and Drama Desk Awards Best Director), Jude Law in Hamlet (also Elsinore and New York), Ivanov (Evening Standard and Critics Circle Award Best Director), Madame de Sade, Twelfth Night, The Chalk Garden (Evening Standard and Critics Circle Awards Best Director), Don Juan in Soho, Frost/Nixon (also Gielgud, New York, USA tour, Tony Nomination Award for Best Director), Othello (Evening Standard and Critics’ Circle Awards for Best Director), The Wild Duck (Critics Circle Award Best Director), Guys and Dolls (Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical Production), Grand Hotel (Olivier Award for Outstanding Musical Production and Evening Standard Award Best Director), The Cut, After Miss Julie, Caligula (Olivier Award Best Director), Merrily We Roll Along (Evening Standard Award Best Director), Passion Play (Evening Standard Award and Critics Circle Award for Best Director). For Sheffield Theatres he directed many productions including Don Carlos (Evening Standard Award Best Director). He mostly recently directed Disney’s Frozen at Buell Theatre, Denver, ahead of opening on Broadway in the Spring.
MICHAEL GRANDAGE COMPANY MGC is a london based production company that produces work across all media, nationally and internationally. The company has also established a general management service and looks after a select group of creative practitioners.
Since launching in 2012 their work includes Privates on Parade with Simon Russell Beale, Peter and Alice with Judi Dench and Ben Whishaw, The Cripple of Inishmaan with Daniel Radcliffe, A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Sheridan Smith and David Walliams and Henry V with Jude Law as part of a year long season at the Noël Coward Theatre, Dawn French: 30 Million Minutes (national and international tour and West End), The Dazzle with Andrew Scott (Found111), Photograph 51 with Nicole Kidman (Noël Coward Theatre), Hughie with Forest Whitaker (Broadway) and Labour of Love with Martin Freeman and Tamsin Greig (Noël Coward Theatre); and the feature film Genius with Colin Firth, Jude Law and Nicole Kidman.
THE LIEUTENANT OF INISHMORE by Martin McDonagh 23 June – 8 September 2018 Press night: 4 July at 7pm
http://ift.tt/1bRPYtx Twitter: @michaelgrandage Facebook/Michael-Grandage-Company
http://ift.tt/2D5P0g9 London Theatre 1
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footyshows · 7 years
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Philomena - Official Trailer (Judi Dench, Steve Coogan)
Philomena – Official Trailer (Judi Dench, Steve Coogan)
http://www.joblo.com – “Philomena” – Official Trailer A woman searches for her adult son, who taken away from her decades ago when she was forced to live in a convent. Director: Stephen Frears Writers: Steve Coogan (screenplay), Jeff Pope (screenplay) Stars: Steve Coogan, Judi Dench, Charlie Murphy In theaters: November 1, 2013 (UK)
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tomwaitslinks · 7 years
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Actor Charlie Murphy (Siobhán in Love/Hate)
1. Charlie Murphy was in Philomena with Steve Coogan.
2. Steve Coogan was in Coffee and Cigarettes with Tom Waits.
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king-galaxius · 4 years
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maisqueumfilme · 7 years
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Enfurecido, Jackie Chan procura vingança pela morte de sua filha no trailer final de The Foreigner [2017].
Após a morte de sua filha em um atentado político, um empresário decide buscar vingança  e inicia um jogo de gato e rato com um funcionário do governo britânico, cujo passado pode ter pistas sobre a identidade dos assassinos.
Completam o elenco Pierce Brosnan (Mamma Mia! [2008]), Charlie Murphy (Philomena [2013]), Katie Leung (Harry Potter e o Cálice de Fogo [2005]), Rory Fleck Byrne (A Marca do Medo [2014]), Simon Kunz (Ponto Final: Match Point [2005]), Pippa Bennett-Warner (The Smoke [2014]), Stephen Hogan (The Tudors [2008]) e Dermot Crowley (Luther [2010 - 2015]).
Com direção de Martin Campbell (007 - Cassino Royale [2006]), o roteiro de David Marconi (Inimigos do Estado [1998]) é baseado no livro The Chinaman, de Stephen Leather.
O filme tem previsão para estrear no Brasil em 30 de novembro.
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maisqueumfilme · 7 years
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Jackie Chan e Pierce Brosnan compartilham o novo cartaz do thriller de ação O Estrangeiro [2017].
Após a morte de sua filha em um atentado político, um empresário decide buscar vingança  e inicia um jogo de gato e rato com um funcionário do governo britânico, cujo passado pode ter pistas sobre a identidade dos assassinos.
Completam o elenco Charlie Murphy (Philomena [2013]), Katie Leung (Harry Potter e o Cálice de Fogo [2005]), Rory Fleck Byrne (A Marca do Medo [2014]), Simon Kunz (Ponto Final: Match Point [2005]), Pippa Bennett-Warner(The Smoke [2014]), Stephen Hogan (The Tudors [2008]) e Dermot Crowley (Luther [2010 - 2015]).
Baseado no livro The Chinaman, de Stephen Leather, o filme tem direção de Martin Campbell (007 - Cassino Royale [2006]) e roteiro de David Marconi (Inimigos do Estado [1998]).
O filme tem previsão para estrear no Brasil em 30 de novembro.
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