Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A sequel, Moron 5.2: The Transformation, was released on November 5, 2014. All lead stars but one reprised their roles in the original movie. Matteo Guidicelli joined the cast as Michael Angelo, replacing Martin Escudero. In an interview from Viva Entertainment YouTube Video, Guidicelli stressed that the character's (previously played by ...
[2] In February 2011, Maya Releasing acquired the film rights for the US theatrical and home video release and foreign sales of Café. [3] Café opened on August 19, 2011, in Los Angeles, California. [4]
Moron 5.2: The Transformation is a 2014 Filipino superhero comedy film and the direct sequel to Moron 5 and the Crying Lady starring Luis Manzano, Billy Crawford, Marvin Agustin, Matteo Guidicelli, DJ Durano and John Lapus.
On May 6, 2015, Blake Lively was cast, [10] followed by Parker Posey in mid-July. [11] By August 4, 2015, more cast was added, including Jeannie Berlin, Corey Stoll and Ken Stott, along with Anna Camp, Stephen Kunken, Sari Lennick and Paul Schneider. [12] In August, Tony Sirico was cast [13] and Max Adler had also joined the cast. [14]
Si-ying (Vivian Sung) is a university freshman who works part-time at a café.There, she met A Bu-si (), a professional coffee maker who can make any type of coffee according to a customer's order, the shop's proprietress (Vivian Chow) who is often quiet and alone, seated at a corner of her café most of the time, as well as Ze-Yu (Marcus Chang).
[2] During a scene later in the film, the band can be heard playing "It Had Better Be Tonight (Meglio stasera)," a song Mancini composed for the first Pink Panther film. The CD originally was released on August 20, 1995, by BMG Victor. Track listing. Side 1: "The Party" (Vocal) 2:14 "Brunette in Yellow" 2:56 "Nothing to Lose" (Instrumental) 3:18
Les Amants du Flore (The Lovers of Flore) is a 2006 French TV film, directed by Ilan Duran Cohen, about the relationship between Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir beginning with their university years, then the following 20 years through the wartime, post-war fame and publication of Le Deuxième Sexe.
The UK version also contains the behind-the-scenes documentaries, giving nearly an hour of extras with the trailer. The second documentary on the UK DVD is about deleted scenes and in it Woodcock explains why he remastered the movie in 2005 and cut it back by about 15 minutes for the 2006 British release.