Exclusive: Filmmaker Vincent Grashaw has signed with Gersh for representation.
Grashaw is a writer, director and producer who most recently directed and produced the horror-thriller What Josiah Saw, which premiered to critical praise at the Fantasia Film Festival and garnered several awards on the festival circuit, before being acquired by Shudder for release on August 4th.
He will next direct the boxing dramedy Bang Bang, with Randomix Productions’ Ran Namerode and Angelia Adzic producing alongside Cole Payne of Traverse Media. The original spec script was written by Grashaw’s fellow Gersh client, Will Janowitz. The project is fully financed and actively being cast by Sig De Midguel & Stephen Vincent, with production to kick off later this fall.
Grashaw’s past work includes the 2017 drama And Then I Go, based on the 2004 novel Project X by Jim Shepard. Premiering at the Los Angeles Film Festival, the film starred Melanie Lynskey, Justin Long and Tony Hale.
Grashaw is a writer, director and producer who most recently directed and produced the horror-thriller What Josiah Saw, which premiered to critical praise at the Fantasia Film Festival and garnered several awards on the festival circuit, before being acquired by Shudder for release on August 4th.
He will next direct the boxing dramedy Bang Bang, with Randomix Productions’ Ran Namerode and Angelia Adzic producing alongside Cole Payne of Traverse Media. The original spec script was written by Grashaw’s fellow Gersh client, Will Janowitz. The project is fully financed and actively being cast by Sig De Midguel & Stephen Vincent, with production to kick off later this fall.
Grashaw’s past work includes the 2017 drama And Then I Go, based on the 2004 novel Project X by Jim Shepard. Premiering at the Los Angeles Film Festival, the film starred Melanie Lynskey, Justin Long and Tony Hale.
- 9/12/2022
- by Matt Grobar
- Deadline Film + TV
Casey Affleck’s production company Sea Change Media is set to produce the The World to Come, the new feature from director Mona Fastvold and screenwriters Ron Hansen and Jim Shepard, adapted from Shepard’s acclaimed short story.
Alongside Affleck, the film will star Katherine Waterston (Inherent Vice, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them), Emmy-nominated Vanessa Kirby (The Crown, Mission: Impossible - Fallout), and Emmy-nominated Jesse Plemons (FX's Fargo, Vice). Sea Change Media’s Affleck and Whitaker Lader will produce.
Christine Vachon and David Hinojosa of Killer Films will executive produce. David Lowery, Toby Halbrooks and James Johnston of Sailor Bear ...
Alongside Affleck, the film will star Katherine Waterston (Inherent Vice, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them), Emmy-nominated Vanessa Kirby (The Crown, Mission: Impossible - Fallout), and Emmy-nominated Jesse Plemons (FX's Fargo, Vice). Sea Change Media’s Affleck and Whitaker Lader will produce.
Christine Vachon and David Hinojosa of Killer Films will executive produce. David Lowery, Toby Halbrooks and James Johnston of Sailor Bear ...
Casey Affleck’s production company Sea Change Media is set to produce the The World to Come, the new feature from director Mona Fastvold and screenwriters Ron Hansen and Jim Shepard, adapted from Shepard’s acclaimed short story.
Alongside Affleck, the film will star Katherine Waterston (Inherent Vice, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them), Emmy-nominated Vanessa Kirby (The Crown, Mission: Impossible - Fallout), and Emmy-nominated Jesse Plemons (FX's Fargo, Vice). Sea Change Media’s Affleck and Whitaker Lader will produce.
Christine Vachon and David Hinojosa of Killer Films will executive produce. David Lowery, Toby Halbrooks and James Johnston of Sailor Bear ...
Alongside Affleck, the film will star Katherine Waterston (Inherent Vice, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them), Emmy-nominated Vanessa Kirby (The Crown, Mission: Impossible - Fallout), and Emmy-nominated Jesse Plemons (FX's Fargo, Vice). Sea Change Media’s Affleck and Whitaker Lader will produce.
Christine Vachon and David Hinojosa of Killer Films will executive produce. David Lowery, Toby Halbrooks and James Johnston of Sailor Bear ...
Charades has come on board to handle international rights, launching the project at this year’s Efm.
Casey Affleck’s Sea Change Media has unveiled its new feature film project The World To Come, about two frontierswomen who become close against the backdrop of an isolated pioneer community in mid-19th century America.
French sales and production company Charades has come on board to handle international rights, launching the project at this year’s Efm. Endeavor Content, ICM Partners and UTA Independent are handling domestic rights
Academy Award-winning Affleck, who is at the Berlinale this year with his lost-in-the-forest drama...
Casey Affleck’s Sea Change Media has unveiled its new feature film project The World To Come, about two frontierswomen who become close against the backdrop of an isolated pioneer community in mid-19th century America.
French sales and production company Charades has come on board to handle international rights, launching the project at this year’s Efm. Endeavor Content, ICM Partners and UTA Independent are handling domestic rights
Academy Award-winning Affleck, who is at the Berlinale this year with his lost-in-the-forest drama...
- 2/7/2019
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- ScreenDaily
Exclusive: His Dark Materials producer Bad Wolf is doubling down on canis lupus with an adaptation of Jim Shepard’s novel Kiss of the Wolf.
I hear the production company, which is run by Julie Gardner and Jane Tranter, is out with the project to streaming services. It is written by Tom Farrelly, who the pair worked with on their recent adaptation of Sky drama A Discovery of Witches.
The book, which was first published in 1994, is described as part family drama and part thriller. Its tagline: a lethal accident turns life into a waking nightmare for a mother and her son in this gripping novel of secrecy and dread.
The story following Joanie Mucherino, abandoned by her husband, and her eleven-year-old son, Todd, who struggle to deal with their intrusive Italian family and a an amorous former flame. Things get even worse when they kill an acquaintance in a...
I hear the production company, which is run by Julie Gardner and Jane Tranter, is out with the project to streaming services. It is written by Tom Farrelly, who the pair worked with on their recent adaptation of Sky drama A Discovery of Witches.
The book, which was first published in 1994, is described as part family drama and part thriller. Its tagline: a lethal accident turns life into a waking nightmare for a mother and her son in this gripping novel of secrecy and dread.
The story following Joanie Mucherino, abandoned by her husband, and her eleven-year-old son, Todd, who struggle to deal with their intrusive Italian family and a an amorous former flame. Things get even worse when they kill an acquaintance in a...
- 1/15/2019
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
The Orchard’s “And Then I Go” culminates in a school shooting carried out by a pair of eighth graders, a story that has only grown more relevant since its premiere at the Los Angeles Film Festival last June. Arman Darbo plays Edwin, a distressed outcast with loving parents (Justin Long and Melanie Lynskey) and a caring principal (Tony Hale, two-time Emmy-winner for “Veep”). His lone friend since kindergarten is Robby, aka “Flake” (Sawyer Barth, “Bridge of Spies”), whose father collects firearms.
Jokes about getting back at their locker-jamming bullies transform into concrete plans to kill classmates. Still, the film “isn’t elegiac or fatalistic, nor is it a dread-filled slog toward an inevitable conclusion. There are glimmers of hope along the way,” wrote IndieWire’s Michael Nordine in his B review, likening the film to Lynne Ramsay’s “We Need to Talk About Kevin.”
Brett Haley and Jim Shepard...
Jokes about getting back at their locker-jamming bullies transform into concrete plans to kill classmates. Still, the film “isn’t elegiac or fatalistic, nor is it a dread-filled slog toward an inevitable conclusion. There are glimmers of hope along the way,” wrote IndieWire’s Michael Nordine in his B review, likening the film to Lynne Ramsay’s “We Need to Talk About Kevin.”
Brett Haley and Jim Shepard...
- 3/28/2018
- by Jenna Marotta
- Indiewire
"You've got to help me with this kid, Budzinski." The Orchard has debuted a trailer for the indie drama And Then I Go, directed by Vincent Grashaw, based on Jim Shepard's novel "Project X". The film stars Arman Darbo and Sawyer Barth as friends in middle school. "In the cruel world of junior high, two friends suffer in a state of anxiety and alienation. Misunderstood by their families and demoralized at school, their fury simmers quietly until an idea for vengeance offers them a terrifying release." The full cast includes Melanie Lynskey, Justin Long, Tony Hale, Carrie Preston, Melonie Diaz, Royalty Hightower, Michael Abbott Jr., and Sean Bridgers. This played at a number of smaller film festivals last year, and is going straight to VOD for release. It looks like a strong indie film about growing up as an awkward kid in school. Here's the official Us trailer (+ posters...
- 3/28/2018
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Sneak Peek Troma director Lloyd Kaufman's latest "...satirical sci-fi comedy..." titled "Return To Nuke 'Em High", available March 18, 2014 from Anchor Bay Films on Blu-ray and DVD:
"...ripped straight from today’s headlines including the contamination and degradation of the world’s food supply, rampant bullying and love triumphing over prejudice, welcome to 'Tromaville High School' where, unfortunately, the glee club has mutated into a vicious gang of 'Cretins'.
"'Chrissy' and 'Lauren', two innocent bloggers, must fight not only the Cretins, mutants and monsters but also the evil 'Tromorganic Foodstuffs Conglomerate'. Will they save Tromaville High School and the world...?"
Cast includes Clay Von Carlowitz, Stefan Dezil, Gabriela Fuhr, Marc Quinnette, Mike Baez, Reiki Tsuno, Jim Sheppard, Debbie Rochon, William Dreyer, Ron Mackay, Brenda Rickert, Asta Paredes, Catherine Corcoran, Zac Amico, Vito Trigo, Babette Bombshell, Stan Lee, Adam P. Murphy and Tara E. Miller.
Click the images to enlarge and...
"...ripped straight from today’s headlines including the contamination and degradation of the world’s food supply, rampant bullying and love triumphing over prejudice, welcome to 'Tromaville High School' where, unfortunately, the glee club has mutated into a vicious gang of 'Cretins'.
"'Chrissy' and 'Lauren', two innocent bloggers, must fight not only the Cretins, mutants and monsters but also the evil 'Tromorganic Foodstuffs Conglomerate'. Will they save Tromaville High School and the world...?"
Cast includes Clay Von Carlowitz, Stefan Dezil, Gabriela Fuhr, Marc Quinnette, Mike Baez, Reiki Tsuno, Jim Sheppard, Debbie Rochon, William Dreyer, Ron Mackay, Brenda Rickert, Asta Paredes, Catherine Corcoran, Zac Amico, Vito Trigo, Babette Bombshell, Stan Lee, Adam P. Murphy and Tara E. Miller.
Click the images to enlarge and...
- 3/10/2014
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
In Jim Shepard’s short-story collection You Think That’s Bad, characters are pitted against a natural world positively Herzogian in its animosity to man, but the global-warming-abetted flooding, skier-swallowing avalanches, and flesh-rotting heat and humidity are just stand-ins for impending emotional catastrophes whose visibility doesn’t make them any more surmountable. At the far opposite end of the spectrum from the small-epiphany school of short-story writing, Shepard’s tales are laden with research and incident, and are embedded in matrices of scientific and historical data, though there isn’t anything stuffy about them. “The Netherlands Lives With Water” (which ...
- 4/28/2011
- avclub.com
I've followed Electric Literature [Link Nsfw -Tu] with some interest online over the past six months or so, both through Twitter and their blog, The Outlet. Part literary journal, part literary app builder (perhaps most notably the custom app they made for Stephen Elliott's The Adderall Diaries), they value both their writers and their readers' method of subscribing. Of course this not to say that other journals don't, but I'm not sure how many small lit outfits can afford to pay their writers $1000 per story and still be able to offer print editions.
That said, this isn't a review concerning the changing business models in the literary world. I'm an avowed print-loving dino who took years to come around to using Google Reader. I'm not the person you want to ask about Kindle vs. iPad. Let us get to the stories then, shall we? Hopeless completist that I am, I wanted to start with No.
That said, this isn't a review concerning the changing business models in the literary world. I'm an avowed print-loving dino who took years to come around to using Google Reader. I'm not the person you want to ask about Kindle vs. iPad. Let us get to the stories then, shall we? Hopeless completist that I am, I wanted to start with No.
- 2/21/2011
- by Tamatha Uhmelmahaye
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