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Hyena Road is a 2015 Canadian war drama film directed, written and produced by Paul Gross, starring Gross and Rossif Sutherland. It was shown in the Gala Presentations section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. [1] The film was shown on 24 September 2015, at the Calgary Film Festival, [2] before a general release on 9 October.
Sutherland was born in Vancouver [2] but lived in Paris from the age of seven. [3] He is the second son of Canadian actors Donald Sutherland and Francine Racette, [2] the brother of actor Angus Sutherland and Roeg Sutherland, and the paternal half-brother of actor Kiefer Sutherland and his twin sister Rachel Sutherland. [4]
Hyena deals with lawyers at Song & Kim who only work for the richest 1% of society. Jung Geum-ja is a swashbuckling lawyer who crosses the boundaries of law and lawlessness, justice and injustice, ethics and corruption. Armed with the strongest survival instincts, she is a true hyena that chases after money and success no matter what it takes.
Paul Michael Gross OC (born April 30, 1959) [1] [2] is a Canadian actor, film and television director, screenwriter, playwright, and producer. He rose to fame for his lead role as RCMP Constable Benton Fraser on the popular Canadian television series Due South (1994–1997).
Hyena Road with Jane Tattersall, David McCallum, Martin Gwynn Jones, Barry Gilmore, David Evans, David Rose, Brennan Mercer, Ed Douglas, Goro Koyama, Andy Malcolm: Won [5] 11th Canadian Screen Awards: Brother with Jane Tattersall, Paul Germann, Krystin Hunter, Kevin Banks: Won [6]
Eighteen states and the ACLU filed lawsuits seeking to prevent President Trump from denying citizenship to children born in the U.S. to non-citizens.
It's just a road where cars are pulling off. Exiting the stadium felt like a nightmare as there was no crowd control and felt crammed." – 2 stars.
Documenting the making of Paul Gross's contemporaneous feature film Hyena Road, [2] the film also functions as a critique of the commercial excesses and glorified violence of mainstream filmmaking. [1]