Director - James Cameron, Cinematography - Russell Carpenter
"The way of water has no beginning and no end. Our hearts beat in the womb of the world. The sea is your home, before your birth and after your death. The sea gives and the sea takes. Water connects all things: life to death, darkness to light."
"While other girls make dates, you make license plates!" I hate schmaltzy sitcoms about giant families and wacky workplaces, but this one is about women in prison. And it's even called "Women In Prison," one of the first series to air on Fox back in 1987. It's a personal dream of mine realized for a whole thirteen episodes. The titular ladies include: a rich ditz framed by her hubby for shoplifting, a bank robber, an abused wife who beat her husband to death with a bat (!), a computer fraudster, and a Cockney-accented working girl. This makes the clink look like summer camp. The inmates have furniture and leopard print bedspreads, everyone wanders through hallways with their cell doors open, and instead of regulation jumpsuits the ladies traipse around in mini-shirts, high heels, midriffs, acid wash denim, spandex, and studded punk cuffs. It's sheer, shameless trash with some really likable players, and I'm guilty, guilty, GUILTY! of digging it.
The Hollywood Reporter: Timothy Olyphant and the cast of Max’s upcoming drama series ‘Full Circle’ dish about what made them want to join the project, the complex characters, and what it was like working with Oscar-winning director Steven Soderbergh.
Spontaneously, a chibi Mo'at from Avatar materialised in my head and I just had to draw her. (I called it a chibi bc it’s a simpler style than my usual)
Who I should draw next to her so she's not alone? 💙
Orphan will be released on Blu-ray on May 14 via Scream Factory. The 2009 horror film is directed by Jaume Collet-Serra (House of Wax, Black Adam).
Vera Farmiga, Peter Sarsgaard, Isabelle Fuhrman, CCH Pounder, Jimmy Bennett, and Aryana Engineer star. David Leslie Johnson-McGoldrick (The Conjuring 2, Aquaman) penned the script.
Special features are in progress and will be announced at a later date.
The angelic Esther (Isabelle Fuhrman), a sweet, precocious child, is taken in by the loving Kate (Vera Farmiga) and John (Peter Sarsgaard). We would describe more, but this shocking, moody masterpiece is a dish best watched cold. When its final twist is played, you'll want to watch it again… with family.