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Archive of posts filed under the Lionsgate Films category.

From Prada to Nada

From Prada to NadaA contemporary, Latina version of Jane Austen’s classic novel Sense and Sensibility. A whimsical spin on Austen’s original, From Prada to Nada follows two spoiled sisters when they are left penniless after the sudden death of their father. Forced to move in with their estranged aunt in East Los Angeles, this is a fish-out-of-water story where the girls ultimately find romance, as well as a love for their culture.

Directed by: Angel Gracia
Starring: Camilla Belle, Alexa Vega, Wilmer Valderrama, Kuno Becker, Adriana Barraza
Screenplay by: Luis Alfaro, Jane Austen, Craig Fernandez, Fina Torres
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: January 28th, 2011

Rabbit Hole

Rabbit Hole

Rabbit Hole is a vivid, hopeful, honest and unexpectedly witty portrait of a family searching for what remains possible in the most impossible of all situations.

Becca and Howie Corbett (Nicole Kidman and Aaron Eckhart) are returning to their everyday existence in the wake of a shocking, sudden loss. Just eight months ago, they were a happy suburban family with everything they wanted. Now, they are caught in a maze of memory, longing, guilt, recrimination, sarcasm and tightly controlled rage from which they cannot escape. While Becca finds pain in the familiar, Howie finds comfort.

The shifts come in abrupt, unforeseen moments. Becca hesitantly opens up to her opinionated, loving mother (Dianne Wiest) and secretly reaches out to the teenager involved in the accident that changed everything (Miles Teller); while Howie lashes out and imagines solace with another woman (Sandra Oh). Yet, as off track as they are, the couple keeps trying to find their way back to a life that still holds the potential for beauty, laughter and happiness. The resulting journey is an intimate glimpse into two people learning to re-engage with each other and a world that has been tilted off its axis.

Directed by: John Cameron Mitchell
Starring: Nicole Kidman, Aaron Eckhart, Dianne Wiest, Sandra Oh, Jon Tenney
Screenplay by: David Lindsay-Abaire
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: December 17th, 2010

The Next Three Days

The Next Three Days

Life seems perfect for John Brennan until his wife, Lara, is arrested for a gruesome murder she says she didn’t commit. Three years into her sentence, John is struggling to hold his family together, raising their son and teaching at college while he pursues every means available to prove her innocence.

With the rejection of their final appeal, Lara becomes suicidal and John decides there is only one possible, bearable solution: to break his wife out of prison. Refusing to be deterred by impossible odds or his own inexperience, John devises an elaborate escape plot and plunges into a dangerous and unfamiliar world, ultimately risking everything for the woman he loves.

Directed by: Paul Haggis
Starring: Olivia Wilde, Elizabeth Banks, Liam Neeson, Russell Crowe, Jonathan Tucker
Screenplay by: Fred Cavayé, Paul Haggis
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: November 19th, 2010

For Colored Girls

For Colored Girls

Tyler Perry’s adaptation of Ntozake Shange’s award-winning 1975 play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf.

Though the film apparently retains the play’s poetic style, its lead cast consists of eight African-American women, each given a name in one of the film’s eight posters; the play’s seven women were nameless and known only by a color. It deals with such subjects as love, abandonment, rape, and abortion.

Directed by: Tyler Perry
Starring: Janet Jackson, Thandie Newton, Kerry Washington, Anika Noni Rose, Phylicia Rashad
Screenplay by: Ntozake Shange, Nzingha Stewart
MPAA Rating: None.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: November 5th, 2010

Saw 3D

Saw 3D

As a deadly battle rages over Jigsaw’s brutal legacy, a group of Jigsaw survivors gathers to seek the support of self-help guru and fellow survivor Bobby Dagen, a man whose own dark secrets unleash a new wave of terror…

David Hackl – production designer of the second, third and fourth films and helmer of “Saw V” – will direct the seventh film in the franchise where people will probably end up in Jigsaw’s death traps and only have a certain amount of time to make a tough decision if they don’t want to die.

The first theatrical feature to be shot exclusively on the cutting-edge SI-3D digital camera system, Saw VII 3D brings the horrifying games of Jigsaw to life like never before. The film stars Tobin Bell, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Sean Patrick Flanery. Saw VII 3D is directed by Kevin Greutert, produced by Oren Koules, Mark Burg and Gregg Hoffman.

Directed by: Kevin Greutert
Starring: Tobin Bell, Gina Holden, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Tanedra Howard
Screenplay by: Marcus Dunstan, Patrick Melton
MPAA Rating: R for sequences of grisly bloody violence and torture, and language.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: October 29th, 2010

Buried

Buried

Paul Conroy is not ready to die. But when he wakes up 6 feet underground with no idea of who put him there or why, life for the truck driver and family man instantly becomes a hellish struggle for survival. Buried with only a cell phone and a lighter, his contact with the outside world and ability to piece together clues that could help him discover his location are maddeningly limited. Poor reception, a rapidly draining battery, and a dwindling oxygen supply become his worst enemies in a tightly confined race against time- fighting panic, despair and delirium, Paul has only 90 minutes to be rescued before his worst nightmare comes true.

Directed by: Rodrigo Cortes
Starring: Ryan Reynolds, Robert Paterson, Samantha Mathis, Stephen Tobolowsky, José Luis García Pérez
Screenplay by: Chris Sparling
MPAA Rating: R for language and some violent content.
Studio: Lionsgate Films
Release Date: October 8th, 2010

Alpha and Omega

Alpha and Omega

What makes for the ultimate road trip? Hitchhiking, truck stops, angry bears, prickly porcupines and a golfing goose with a duck caddy. Just ask Kate and Humphrey, two wolves who are trying to get home after being taken by park rangers and shipped halfway across the country.

Humphrey is an Omega wolf, whose days are about quick wit, snappy one-liners and hanging with his motley crew of fun-loving wolves and video-gaming squirrels. Kate is an Alpha: duty, discipline and sleek Lara Croft eye-popping moves fuel her fire. Humphrey’s motto – make ‘em laugh. Kate’s motto – I’m the boss. And they have a thousand miles to go.

Back home rival wolf packs are on the march and conflict is brewing. Only Kate and Humphrey can restore the peace. But first, they have to survive each other.

Directed by: Anthony Bell, Ben Gluck
Starring: Justin Long, Hayden Panettiere, Christina Ricci, Danny Glover, Dennis Hopper
Screenplay by: Chris Denk, Steve Moore
MPAA Rating: PG for rude humor and some mild action.
Release Date: September 17th, 2010
Studio: Lionsgate Films

The Last Exorcism

The Last Exorcism

When he arrives on the rural Louisiana farm of Louis Sweetzer, the Reverend Cotton Marcus expects to perform just another routine “exorcism” on a disturbed religious fanatic. An earnest fundamentalist, Sweetzer has contacted the charismatic preacher as a last resort, certain his teenage daughter Nell is possessed by a demon who must be exorcized before their terrifying ordeal ends in unimaginable tragedy.

Buckling under the weight of his conscience after years of parting desperate believers with their money, Cotton and his crew plan to film a confessionary documentary of this, his last exorcism. But upon arriving at the already blood drenched family farm, it is soon clear that nothing could have prepared him for the true evil he encounters there. Now, too late to turn back, Reverend Marcus’ own beliefs are shaken to the core when he and his crew must find a way to save Nell – and themselves – before it is too late.

Directed by: Daniel Stamm
Starring: Patrick Fabian, Iris Bahr, Louis Herthum, Ashley Bell, Jamie Alyson Caudle
Screenplay by: Huck Botko, Andrew Gurland
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for disturbing violent content and terror, some sexual references and thematic material.
Release Date: August 27th, 2010
Studio: Lionsgate Films

The Expendables

The Expendables

A group of mercenaries is hired to infiltrate a South American country and overthrow its ruthless dictator. Once the mission begins, the men realize things aren’t quite as they appear, finding themselves caught in a dangerous web of deceit and betrayal. With their mission thwarted and an innocent life in danger, the men struggle with an even tougher challenge — one that threatens to destroy this band of brothers.

Barney Ross is a man with nothing to lose. Fearless and void of emotion, he is the leader, the sage and the strategist of this tight-knit band of men who live on the fringe. His only attachment is to his pickup truck, his seaplane and his team of loyal modern-day warriors. His is a true cynic who describes what he does as “emoving those hard to get at stains.”

The team behind him is made up of Lee Christmas, former SAS and a savant with anything that has a blade; Yin Yang, a master at close-quarter combat; Hale Caesar, who has known Barney for ten years and is a long-barrel weapons specialist; Toll Road, a skilled demolitions expert and considered the intellect of the group; and Gunnar Jensen, a combat veteran and an expert in precision sniping who struggles with his own demons. When the mysterious Church offers Barney a job no one else would take, Barney and his team embark on what appears to be a routine mission: overthrow General Gaza, the murderous dictator of the small island country of Vilena and end the years of death and destruction inflicted on its people.

On a reconnaissance mission to Vilena, Barney and Christmas meet their contact Sandra, a local freedom-fighter with a dark secret. They also come to learn who their true enemy is: rogue ex-CIA operative James Monroe and his henchman Paine. When things go terribly wrong, Barney and Christmas are forced to leave Sandra behind, essentially giving her a death sentence. Haunted by this failure, Barney convinces the team to return to Vilena to rescue the hostage and finish the job he started. And to perhaps save a soul: his own.

Directed by: Sylvester Stallone
Starring: Sylvester Stallone, Terry Crews, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Giselle Itie
MPAA Rating: R for strong action and bloody violence throughout, and for some language.
Release Date: August 13th, 2010
Studio: Lionsgate Films

Killers

Killers

Starring: Katherine Heigl, Ashton Kuchner, Catherine O’Hara, Tom Selleck, Alex Borstein, Katheryn Winnick
Directed by: Robert Luketic
Screenplay by: Bob DeRosa, Ted Griffin
Release Date: June 4th, 2010
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for Violent action, sexual material and language.
Studio: Lionsgate Films

Trying to recover from a sudden break-up, Jen Kornfeldt (Katherine Heigl) believes she’ll never fall in love again. But when she reluctantly joins her parents on a trip to the French Riviera, Jen happens to meet the man of her dreams, the dashing, handsome Spencer Aimes (Ashton Kutcher). Three years later, her seemingly impossible wish has come true: she and Spencer are newlyweds living the ideal suburban life – that is, until the morning after Spencer’s 30th birthday when bullets start flying. Literally.

It turns out Spencer never bothered to tell Jen he’s also an international super-spy, and now Jen’s perfect world has been turned upside down. Faced with the fact that her husband is a hit man, Jen is determined to discover what other secrets Spencer might be keeping – all the while trying to dodge bullets, keep up neighborly appearances, manage the in-laws…and work out some major trust issues. And you thought suburban life was easy.

Starring Katherine Heigl and Ashton Kutcher, directed by Robert Luketic from a screenplay by Bob DeRosa and Ted Griffin and story by Bob DeRosa, Lionsgate’s KILLERS is a hilarious, unpredictable action comedy about love, marriage and serious firepower.