FBI: Most Wanted fans, we’ve got a fresh off the press preview for the new Season 5 Episode 1 episode titled Above & Beyond!
Find out everything you need to know about the Above & Beyond episode of FBI: Most Wanted, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
FBI: Most Wanted Above & Beyond Season 5 Episode 1 Preview
Get ready for an intense and gripping episode of “FBI: Most Wanted” titled “Above & Beyond,” set to air on CBS at 10:00 Pm on February 13, 2024. In this thrilling installment, viewers will be on the edge of their seats as the team faces a complex and dangerous case.
When a high-stakes deal takes a disastrous turn, the team finds themselves racing against the clock to unravel the mystery. To crack the case, they enlist the help of a familiar face, which will undoubtedly add a layer of intrigue to the storyline.
Find out everything you need to know about the Above & Beyond episode of FBI: Most Wanted, including a full preview, videos, release date, cast information and how to watch!
FBI: Most Wanted Above & Beyond Season 5 Episode 1 Preview
Get ready for an intense and gripping episode of “FBI: Most Wanted” titled “Above & Beyond,” set to air on CBS at 10:00 Pm on February 13, 2024. In this thrilling installment, viewers will be on the edge of their seats as the team faces a complex and dangerous case.
When a high-stakes deal takes a disastrous turn, the team finds themselves racing against the clock to unravel the mystery. To crack the case, they enlist the help of a familiar face, which will undoubtedly add a layer of intrigue to the storyline.
- 2/6/2024
- by News
- TV Regular
A new horror-mystery-thriller from Terror Films and director Julio Maria Martino, Country of Hotels tells the stories of "the desperate souls who pass through the doors of 508, a room on the fifth floor of an anonymous, decaying hotel. We are taken on a surreal and blackly comic journey down its lonely corridors and behind its outdated furnishings and stained surfaces. The story plunges us into the ever-turning carousel of haunted lives who check in and out of this sinister establishment."
Says director Martino, “When we were making Country of Hotels, we worked hard to create an environment which was relentlessly oppressive and claustrophobic, occasionally punctuated by moments of dark humor. An enclosed world in which an unseen, unnamed and mutable threat lurked behind hotel room doors and down long lonely corridors. A threat which might manifest itself suddenly and at any moment. In visualizing this world, I felt we were...
Says director Martino, “When we were making Country of Hotels, we worked hard to create an environment which was relentlessly oppressive and claustrophobic, occasionally punctuated by moments of dark humor. An enclosed world in which an unseen, unnamed and mutable threat lurked behind hotel room doors and down long lonely corridors. A threat which might manifest itself suddenly and at any moment. In visualizing this world, I felt we were...
- 4/17/2023
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
There have been plenty of horror films set in the Old West and the Old South, as well as eras of religious inquisition in the Old World. “The Last Thing Mary Saw” goes where relatively few have gone before, however, by taking place in the still-new United States’ “civilized” rural East, where an industrial age had yet to penetrate and mores remained none too distant from the earliest European settlers’ harsh Puritanism.
Most obviously comparable would be 2015’s sleeper hit “The Witch,” though this first feature by writer-director Edoardo Vitaletti is not as vivid in atmospheric or suspense terms. Still, it’s similarly distinguished by a strong sense of a particular cultural epoch’s comingled faith, fear and oppression, even if “Mary” is set more than 200 years later. Perhaps more rewarding in the end as straight, downbeat period drama than as an occult thriller, it was acquired by genre platform...
Most obviously comparable would be 2015’s sleeper hit “The Witch,” though this first feature by writer-director Edoardo Vitaletti is not as vivid in atmospheric or suspense terms. Still, it’s similarly distinguished by a strong sense of a particular cultural epoch’s comingled faith, fear and oppression, even if “Mary” is set more than 200 years later. Perhaps more rewarding in the end as straight, downbeat period drama than as an occult thriller, it was acquired by genre platform...
- 8/30/2021
- by Dennis Harvey
- Variety Film + TV
The Last Thing Mary Saw Review — The Last Thing Mary Saw (2021) Film Review from the 25th Annual Fantasia International Film Festival, a movie written and directed by Edoardo Vitaletti, starring Isabelle Fuhrman, Rory Culkin, Stefanie Scott, Shane Coffey, Carolyn McCormick, Judith Roberts, Michael Laurence, Dawn McGee, Continue reading: Film Review: The Last Thing Mary Saw: A Dark Period Horror-Drama That Impresses Despite Some Rough Messaging [Fantasia 2021]...
- 8/15/2021
- by Jacob Mouradian
- Film-Book
In celebration of its 25th anniversary, Rattlestick Playwrights Theater will host a 25th Anniversary AlumniJam every Monday night in January. These four events will showcase 15 alumni playwrights who will revisit past productions and share new never-before-seen work. Participating writers include Bill Bowers, Jessica Dickey, William Francis Hoffman, Xavier Galva, Basil Kreimendahl, Michael Laurence, Jessica Litwak, Mashuq Mushtaq Deen, Matt Pepper, Tim Pickney, Diana Oh, Dael Orlandersmith, Jose Rivera, Cori Thomas, and Jonathan Tolins. These writers represent some of New York's greatest voices-Pulitzer finalists, Obie winners, and Academy Award nominees-who have shaped Off-Broadway theater over the last quarter century.
- 12/17/2019
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Stars: Orson Welles, Micheál MacLiammóir, Suzanne Cloutier, Robert Coote, Fay Compton, Michael Laurence | Written by William Shakespeare, Orson Welles, Jean Sacha | Directed by Orson Welles
We open with a funeral. For whom we’re not sure, but by the end of Orson Welles’ 1952 adaptation of Shakespeare’s Moorish tragedy Othello we can be certain that more than one of the main characters will be dead.
The location is Cyprus, and Venetian General Othello (Welles) is married to Desdemona, much to the chagrin of Othello’s supposedly loyal ensign, Iago (Micheál MacLiammóir). The latter sets about bringing ruin to his master through a convoluted campaign of rumour and hearsay. Specifically, he makes Othello believe that one of his captains, Cassio (Michael Laurence), is romantically involved with Desdemona. In all of literature a simple handkerchief has never held such power.
MacLiammóir is having an absolute riot in the upsetter role (the painted-on...
We open with a funeral. For whom we’re not sure, but by the end of Orson Welles’ 1952 adaptation of Shakespeare’s Moorish tragedy Othello we can be certain that more than one of the main characters will be dead.
The location is Cyprus, and Venetian General Othello (Welles) is married to Desdemona, much to the chagrin of Othello’s supposedly loyal ensign, Iago (Micheál MacLiammóir). The latter sets about bringing ruin to his master through a convoluted campaign of rumour and hearsay. Specifically, he makes Othello believe that one of his captains, Cassio (Michael Laurence), is romantically involved with Desdemona. In all of literature a simple handkerchief has never held such power.
MacLiammóir is having an absolute riot in the upsetter role (the painted-on...
- 12/14/2018
- by Rupert Harvey
- Nerdly
On Tuesday, April 3rd, Primary Stages Casey Childs, Founder amp Executive Producer Andrew Leynse, Artistic Director Elliot Fox, Managing Director celebrated opening night of The Morini Strad, a new play by Willy Holtzman Sabina. Directed by Casey Childs, the cast features Michael Laurence Krapp39, Broadway's Talk Radio, Opus at Primary Stages, Tony nominee Mary Beth Peil The Good Wife, Dawson's Creek, The King and I, and celebrated violin soloist Hanah Stuart Chicago Symphony Hall, Zankel Hall. The production features a set design by Neil Patel, costume design by David C. Woolard, lighting design by Mary Louise Geiger, original music and sound design by Lindsay Jones, and projection design by Jan Hartley.The limited engagement plays through April 28 at Primary Stages at 59E59 Theaters.Check out photos from the celebration below...
- 4/4/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Primary Stages concludes its 27th season with the New York premiere of The Morini Strad, a new play by Willy Holtzman Sabina. Directed by Casey Childs, the cast will feature Michael Laurence Krapp39, Broadways Talk Radio, Opus at Primary Stages, Tony Award nominee Mary Beth Peil The Good Wife, Dawsons Creek, The King and I, and celebrated violin soloist Hanah Stuart Chicago Symphony, Zankel Hall. The limited engagement will play March 20 April 28 at Primary Stages at 59E59 Theaters. Opening night is April 3rd.The company just met the press and BroadwayWorld was there for the big event. Check out full photo coverege below...
- 3/6/2012
- by Walter McBride
- BroadwayWorld.com
Primary Stages Casey Childs, Founder amp Executive Producer Andrew Leynse, Artistic Director Elliot Fox, Managing Director concludes its 27th season with the New York premiere of The Morini Strad, a new play by Willy Holtzman Sabina. Directed by Casey Childs, the cast will feature Michael Laurence Krapp39, Broadways Talk Radio, Opus at Primary Stages, Tony Award nominee Mary Beth Peil The Good Wife, Dawsons Creek, The King and I, and celebrated violin soloist Hanah Stuart Chicago Symphony, Zankel Hall. The limited engagement will play March 20 April 28 at Primary Stages at 59E59 Theaters. Opening night is April 3rd.
- 2/16/2012
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Considering what happened to him in the season premiere of "Damages," you wouldn't think things could get much worse for Tom Shayes.
Wrong.
We learned in the season's second episode that Tom (Tate Donovan) -- who is destined to die this season -- also has a personal connection to the legal case he and Patty (Glenn Close) are pursuing and saw a couple of pieces come together regarding the investment fraud and the mysterious homeless guy (Michael Laurence), who apparently lives next to a very important trash bin.
Donovan and co-creator Todd Kessler talked about those developments and more in a conference call Tuesday (Feb. 2). Some highlights:
Tom's connection to the Tobin case
Kessler: "What's revealed in the second episode is that the case is personal to Tom, in a way that no case in either the first season or the second season had been personal to Patty or anyone in the office.
Wrong.
We learned in the season's second episode that Tom (Tate Donovan) -- who is destined to die this season -- also has a personal connection to the legal case he and Patty (Glenn Close) are pursuing and saw a couple of pieces come together regarding the investment fraud and the mysterious homeless guy (Michael Laurence), who apparently lives next to a very important trash bin.
Donovan and co-creator Todd Kessler talked about those developments and more in a conference call Tuesday (Feb. 2). Some highlights:
Tom's connection to the Tobin case
Kessler: "What's revealed in the second episode is that the case is personal to Tom, in a way that no case in either the first season or the second season had been personal to Patty or anyone in the office.
- 2/2/2010
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Zap2It - From Inside the Box
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