Kissed, Lynne Stopkewich, 1996
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Emily Rose +female directors on Haven (2010-2015)
1x3 Harmony (2010) Directed by Rachel Talalay
1x4 Consumed (2010) Directed by Rachel Talalay written by Ann Hamilton
1x11 The Trial of Audrey Parker (2010) Directed by Lee Rose
2x4 Sparks and Recreation (2011) Directed by Lynne Stopkewich
2x10 Who, What, Where W*ndigo (2011) Directed by Lee Rose
2x12 Sins of the Fathers (2011) Directed by Lee Rose
3x1 301 (2012) Directed by Lee Rose
3x5 Double Jeopardy (2012) Directed by Nisha Ganatra written by Nora & Lilla Zuckerman
3x12 Reunion (2013) Directed by Lee Rose written by Gabrielle Stanton
4x4 Lost and Found (2013) Directed by Lee Rose
4x11 Shot in the Dark (2013) Directed by Mairzee Almas
4x12 When the Bough Breaks (2013) Directed by Lee Rose co-written Shernold Edwards
5x18 Wild Card (2015) Directed by Lee Rose
5x19 Perditus (2015) Directed by Lee Rose co-written by Gabrielle Stanton
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After the River
- A Suspicious River (2000) oneshot.
Millie's POV of the ending, with emphasis on hurt/comfort. AO3.
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Quinzaine 55 : show these films that we cannot see ! 4/4
La Quinzaine will have other great surprises in store for us, such as the Franco-Japanese co-production of Fruits de la passion by Shuji Terayama in 1981, a very free adaptation of Retour à Roissy by Pauline Réage. The even freer adaptation in 1986 of the Devil with a body by Marco Bellocchio and its real fellatio which will cost Maruschka's career dearly. The dreamlike, the lyrical, the diaphanous Kissed, the first film by Lynne Stopkewich, a necrophiliac fable taken from a short story by Barbara Gowdy. And the very contemporary Leap Year by Michael Rowe exploring the mechanics of a sadomasochistic couple.
Then other forgotten films: The Girl Offered by Helma Sanders-Brahms, Irezumi – Tattoo Spirit by Yoichi Takabayashi, The Cold Esquimaude by Janos Xantus, Annabelle Partagée by Francesca Comencini…
So many films around one and the same subject, an ancestral problem that seems to rule the world: sex. Political sex, social sex, spiritual sex, sexes, sexualities. Sometimes represented with modesty, sometimes with exuberance, sex is honored in these works which have been able to magnify it with respect.
Sexuality, even over-represented, is still taboo. A small part of each of us sleeps in a shell of ice. The role of these films is, among other things, to melt this armor so that the spectator discovers with emotion another facet of his personality, beautiful, pure, and luminous.
La Quinzaine is the receptacle of sensuality from all over the world. She delivers a haven of cottony warmth to one of the biggest cinematographic institutions. She does not deny what makes up an entire part of Man, she embraces it, she appropriates it, with a program that is always precise and surprising. La Quinzaine reinvents sex on the big screen and gives it credibility.
- Clara Sebastiao
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Hallmark Movie Spotlight
October Kiss (2015)
Directed by Lynne Stopkewich.
Written by MacKenzie Austin.
Starring Ashley Williams, Sam Jaeger, Laura Mitchell, Hannah Cheramy, Kiefer O'Reilly, and Miranda Frigon.
Originally premiered Saturday, October 17, 2015 on the Hallmark Channel. part of the Fall Harvest movie block.
Synopsis:
Poppy Summerall is hired near Halloween as a temporary nanny by Ryan Lawson, a widowed, work-obsessed executive. Through a series of adventures, the eternally optimistic Poppy sets out to teach Ryan and his two young children what’s important in life – unconditional love, family and the joy of everyday occurrences.
This Hallmark Original movie was later adapted into a movie novelization for Hallmark Publishing. Published on August 21, 2018, written by Kristen Ethridge. Available in paperback and ebook/Kindle.
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Kissed (1996) Lynne Stopkewich
April 3rd 2021
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