Stay updated with breaking news from Amy nostbakken. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Grace John Simm stars as Roy Grace, a troubled detective superintendent haunted by the disappearance of his wife, in this two-part thriller adapted from Peter James’s bestselling novels. After his dangerous police methods are questioned, Grace’s job is on the line. Sunday 14 March, 8pm, ITV Money Heist creators Alex Pina and Esther Martínez Lobato deliver another pulpy Spanish action thriller. After best friends and sex workers Coral, Wendy and Gina make a desperate run for freedom, they are tracked by their pimp and his henchman on a chaotic journey that solidifies their bond. Friday 19 March, Netflix Season three of the action-packed sports docuseries chronicling the high-stakes world of big money and even bigger egos in Formula 1 tackles the great leveller of the Covid-19 pandemic. With racing halted on the eve of 2020’s Australian Grand Prix, we follow the drivers through their limbo to Lewis Hamilton’s astonishing seventh world title. ....
Last modified on Fri 12 Mar 2021 04.36 EST Why have one actor play your lead character when you could have two? Thatâs the central conceit of this distinctive Canadian indie, written by the actors in question, Amy Nostbakken and Norah Sadava, and adapted from their stage play. They are both Cassandra, a disorganised woman in Toronto thrown into crisis by the death of her mother. Unlike movies with similar conceits â Luis Buñuelâs That Obscure Object of Desire, for example, where two actors alternated in a role â Mouthpiece keeps both women on screen at all times. As a reflection of a fractured mental state, itâs an effective device, although the relationship is not sharply defined. Sometimes they are like best friends or sisters, in playful internal dialogue; others they are in good cop/bad cop opposition, or even conflict. Sometimes their movements are identical (they trip over their scarves in synch, for example); at others they appear to be auton ....
Mouthpiece review - double entendre in Toronto | reviews, news & interviews Mouthpiece review - double entendre in Toronto Mouthpiece review - double entendre in Toronto Two women play one conflicted character in Patricia Rozema s adaptation of stage play by Markie Robson-ScottWednesday, 10 March 2021 Two heads are better than one: Amy Nostbakken (standing) and Norah Sadava as Cassandra Cassandra and her sister – or perhaps they’re friends or lovers – seem extraordinarily in tune. Like choreographed dancers, they move precisely in unison, down to tripping over their scarves at the same moment or flopping drunkenly into bed together while a cell phone buzzes beside them unanswered, on and on into the night. ....