Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Knives Out is a series of American murder mystery films written, directed, and co-produced by Rian Johnson.The films star Daniel Craig as private detective/investigator Benoit Blanc, involved with investigating mysteries.
Best Casting for TV Movie of the Week Valorie Massalas Won [4] Peabody Awards: NBC, Barwood Films Ltd., Story Line Productions Inc., and Trillium Productions Inc., in association with TriStar Television: Won [5] Primetime Emmy Awards: Outstanding Made for Television Movie: Barbra Streisand, Glenn Close, Craig Zadan, Neil Meron, Cis Corman, and ...
Close is the president of Trillium Productions Inc. [144] [145] Her company has produced films like Albert Nobbs, Sarah, Plain and Tall, and South Pacific. With Barbra Streisand she produced the TV film Serving in Silence (1995), for which both were nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Television Movie.
Trillium is a series of five fantasy novels by Marion Zimmer Bradley, Julian May, and Andre Norton, [1] each with the word "trillium" in the title. They take place in a post-holocaust world that is hinted to be a colony of earth on another planet where magic works.
A movie theatre was announced in a press release in December 2018, set to be open in 2020. [15] It was later pushed back to 2021. [16] In 2023, the unbuilt theatre was redesigned into an entertainment complex called "Trilith Live". The complex will include an 1,800-seat auditorium, two live television stages, and various food and retail shops.
The Trillium series began as a three-way collaboration. After the first book, each of the three authors continued the series on her own. Marion Zimmer Bradley, Julian May, and Andre Norton, Black Trillium (New York: Doubleday, 1990). ISBN 0-385-26185-3. Blood Trillium (New York: Bantam, 1992). ISBN 0-553-08851-3. Sky Trillium (New York: Del Rey ...
List of Universal Pictures films (1912–1919) List of Universal Pictures films (1920–1929) List of Universal Pictures films (1930–1939) List of Universal Pictures films (1940–1949)
The pilot cost $8 million, one of the most expensive made-for-television movies at the time. [2] The theatrical version made use of Universal's Sensurround process, [ 2 ] and was the last produced film to use it.