Thursday, May 31, 2018

Release: Swim Through the Darkness

Swim Through the Darkness
Genre: Drama/Biography
Director: Steve McQueen
Writer: Chad Taylor
Cast: John Gallgher Jr., Patricia Clarkson, Melissa Benoist, Jonathan Groff, Bruce Greenwood, Payman Maadi, Alia Bhatt




Budget: $24,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $28,631,069
Foreign Box Office: $20,070,690
Total Profit: -$14,446,646

Reaction: The financial prospects for this film were always risky. The multiple locations and period setting made the film cost a certain amount, despite the relatively inexpensive cast - couple that with the fairly unknown subject and you have a risky financial proposition.


"John Gallagher Jr., who for the past several years has quietly made a name for himself in smaller films like Short Term 12, here has the chance to shine in a lead role... and he doesn't take it for granted, delivering a nuanced performance." - Mark Rawls, Seattle Times

"Director Steve McQueen and writer Chad Taylor here have delivered a biopic of a little-known musician. It's a hit or miss film, just like the subject's music. What it does do however is expertly capture a time and place." - Allen Poole, AV Club


"While the subject of the film is far from conventional, Steve McQueen's film delivers a far too conventional biography." - Gillian Donaldson, Variety

Last Resort Films Jukebox: Swim Through the Darkness


1. "Ice and Snow" - Maitreya Kali

2. "Parasite" - Nick Drake

3. "Olivia, in a Separate Bed" - Robin Pecknold

4. "Country Girl" - Penny Arkade

5. "Place to Be" - Nick Drake

6. "Life Child" - Ramases

7. "I'm Walking Solo" - Maitreya Kali

8. "Ice and Snow" - Mary Epworth

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Now Showing: Swim Through the Darkness

Swim Through the Darkness
Genre: Drama/Biography
Director: Steve McQueen
Writer: Chad Taylor
Cast: John Gallagher Jr., Patricia Clarkson, Melissa Benoist, Jonathan Groff, Bruce Greenwood, Payman Maadi, Alia Bhatt

Plot: Act I: 1972

Maitreya Kali (John Gallagher Jr.) is a struggling musician in L.A., now living with his parents (who insist on calling him Craig, his birth name). Maitreya is reeling from just being dumped by his fiancée, and redirects most of his emotions through making music. His mother Nona (Patricia Clarkson) tells him that his old friend Greg stopped by and he should get back into touch and possibly get him out of this funk. Maiteya devotes most of his time putting the finishing touches on his self-produced album Inca, on which he performed all of the vocals and instruments. To his mother’s disapproval, he gets a tattoo of a spider directly between his eyebrows – reminiscent of Manson’s swastika.

Maitreya goes to a local bar and is several rounds in when he runs into Wendy (Melissa Benoist), a former acquaintance. She invites him to her table to join her and a couple of friends – including Greg (Jonathan Groff). Reluctant at first, Maitreya joins them and is quiet at first. As the night progresses, he becomes more talkative and spouts philosophical beliefs. As he starts to descend into a rant about the end of the world and himself being the chosen messiah, the others start to get scared and worried by his attitude. When Greg pulls Maitreya aside and suggests he tone it down a bit, Kali pulls out a knife but keeps it at a safe distance from Greg’s body. Obviously Greg is shaken by this and leaves the bar with Sheila and friends.

Maitreya wanders the streets of L.A., handing out his album to strangers. Maitreya sits on a public bench with his guitar, strumming melancholic folk tunes. We then find out that this is actually across the street from Greg’s house when Greg arrives home from work. Upon seeing Maitreya, he tells him to stay away. Maitreya is insistent that he only wants to give him his new album, but Greg retreats inside and locks the door. Back home, Nona informs him that Greg has filed for a restraining order from him, upon which she begins to grill him as to why. She also brings up the money needed to reimburse his fiancee’s family for the wedding dress that he cut into pieces when they broke up. He becomes angry and rushes at his mom, punching her multiple times until his father intervenes. Fade to black.

Act II: 1966

Craig Smith is an upbeat, clean-cut twentysomething – looking cut directly from the Beach Boy cloth. He, Greg, and three other young musicians are part of pop group the Good Time Singers. He and Greg are best friends, both in and out of the studio. They currently have a steady gig as the back-up band for popular 50s crooner Don Tucker (Bruce Greenwood) – for whom Craig is also a songwriter. On the road, Craig is hard at work courting Don’s daughter Wendy – who is also a back-up singer for her father. When Don discovers this, Craig and the band are told they will not be retained at the end of the tour.

As the Good Time Singers disband, Greg suggests they become a folk-pop duo named Craig & Greg. Craig is receptive to the idea until Wendy, whom they are still in contact with, lets him know about an audition to be on a Monkees rip-off show for ABC. Realizing the exposure this could give him, Craig opts for this route and shuns Greg’s offer. He successfully lands one of the leading roles. To celebrate, he takes Wendy out to a movie and they finally kiss.

A few weeks later, Craig receives news that ABC did not pick up the pilot of the show, effectively putting him back to square one. He calls Greg and is willing to take him up on his offer, but his friend has already moved on to a new band. Depressed and disillusioned by the corporate music culture, Craig starts to spend more time alone and ignoring the calls of people like his parents and Wendy. He sits alone in his room playing the acoustic guitar as the camera fades to black.

Act III: 1968

Craig is in a VW Bus on a trip from Turkey to India – effectively known as the Hippie Trail. Craig and his companions (all strangers to him) have very little possessions except for a sizable drug supply. During their one-day stay in Afghanistan, Craig becomes enamored with a girl (Alia Bhatt) he sees from afar. He spends most of his day “touring the city” under the influence of LSD, but in actuality, he is just following the girl around from afar. He is given a brief moment of hope when they share eye contact and he returns to the hotel satisfied. He informs his fellow travelers that he will stay behind for a few days and meet up with them in Kabul.

The next day, in his quest to find the girl again, he befriends a local shopkeeper Yousef (Payman Maadi), who speaks English. At the apartment above the shop, Craig discovers the man has a guitar and he offers to play him something. They sit on Yousef’s balcony as Craig sings a love song he has made on the spot, with the Afgahngirl in mind. Craig, again on acid, takes the life advice from the man to heart – seemingly awakening some type of spirit within him.

He promises the man that he will be back to see him at some point. Back out on the town, Craig searches for the girl. After many fruitless attempts, he finally finds her again but this time she is with a group of others. When the girl notices him again, this time she alerts her friends that this is the man who was following her before. As they all turn their eyes towards him, Craig tries to flee but multiple men catch up to him. They corner him in a back alley and beat him to a bloody pulp. One of the men proceeds to rape Craig. He is left alone in the alley, sprawled out on the ground.

Epilogue:
Maitreya sits alone in prison, after being prosecuted for assaulting his mother. End text scrolling over this image reveal that he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and released three years later. With no family, he proceeded to be homeless for the next 35 years of his life. Inca, and its predecessor 1971 Apache, would go on to gain a cult following in niche music circles. Maitreya Kali passed away in anonymity in 2012.


Release: Triangle

Triangle
Genre: Thriller
Director: Daniel Espinosa
Writer: Clive Steinbeck
Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Edward Norton, Diego Luna





Budget: $55,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $87,061,030
Foreign Box Office: $134,313,013
Total Profit: $57,262,431

Reaction: The success of this film hinged entirely on the star power of Jennifer Lawrence, and that turned out to be a good thing. Turns out people turned out in droves to see Lawrence in this R-rated sexy thriller, which is good because she mad $25 million for her role in the film.



"Triangle is Jennifer Lawrence's show through and through. She commands the screen with her performance - and yes, her sex appeal." - Michael Van Patten, Slant Magazine

"Daniel Espinosa is a talented director, although this material feels a bit out of his comfort zone - and the film feels very awkward at times because of it." - Henry Stewart, Chicago Sun-Times


"For what would seem to be a simple thriller, this is really a top notch production. Much will be made of Lawrence's sexy, showy performance, but Diego Luna and Edward Norton also deliver great performances and fit their parts to a tee." - Paul Ontkean, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Behind the Scenes: Death Dream

Principal photography has wrapped on Death Dream, with it well into post-production at this point and set for release very soon. This time around, writer John Malone has shared images of two new characters, those played by Diane Lane and David Morse. Lane will play the mother of lead character Andy Woodward, played by Alden Ehrenreich, and the wife of Kyle Chandler's character. Morse will play the family's war veteran neighbor who has a unique take on Andy's strange behavior after coming back from fighting overseas.


In Development

Uncharted: Rodrigo Santoro ("Westworld", Ben-Hur) and Edi Gathegi ("StartUp", Aloha) have joined the video game adaptation Uncharted, directed by Brad Peyton and written by APJ. Both will appear in a villainous capacity as henchman/archaeologist Atoq Navarro and pirate Eddy Raja respectively.

Bonnie and Clyde: JK Simmons (Whiplash, The Price of Fame), David Tennant (Bad Samaritan, "Jessica Jones"), Will Poulter (Detroit, Maze Runner: The Death Cure) and Jennifer Jason Leigh will round out the ensemble cast of the Michael B. Jordan and Elizabeth Olsen-led Bonnie and Clyde re-telling. Jason Leigh will play Bonnie Parker's (Elizabeth Olsen) mother, while Simmons, Tennant and Poulter will play law enforcement. Taika Waititi directs the film from a script by Chad Taylor.

Carmilla:
Steven Soderbergh's upcoming horror/mystery Carmilla has added Damian Lewis ("Billions", Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory), Katheryn Winnick ("Vikings", Masters of the Universe) and John Goodman (Cape Torment, "Roseanne"). Goodman will play a vampire expert, Lewis will play Lucy Boynton's father, and Winnick will play the mother of the mysterious Carmilla (Lili Simmons). Jack Slipter wrote the script.

La Resistance: Timothee Chalamet (Home Again, Cyrano de Bergerac), Jean Dujardin (The Artist, The Wolf of Wall Street) and Gwyneth Paltrow (Mortdecai, Iron Man 3) will join the already cast Gary Oldman and Marion Cotillard in Morten Tyldum's WWII drama from writer Mo Buck. Dujardin will play Cotillard's husband and Chalamet will play their son, while Paltrow will play Cotillard's sister.

Mass Effect 2: Following the detour of Mass Effect: Cerberus, writer Seth Overton (Mass Effect: Cerberus, Fevre Dream) and director Rian Johnson (Mass Effect, Looper) are back with a sequel to the first film. Also returning will be cast members Henry Cavill (Justice Leage, Paradise Lost), Tom Hardy (Hated: The Ballad of GG Allin, Thr Prisoner), Alicia Vikander (Dishonest, Tomb Raider), Mads Mikkelsen (The Question, Blood Countess) and Dominic Purcell (Mass Effect, "Prison Break").

Perfect Blue: Writer Roy Horne will make his debut with thriller Perfect Blue, based on the anime. Mark Pellington (Nostalgia, I Melt With You) has signed on to direct after a difficult directorial search. The cast will be led by Elle Fanning (Home Again, Sisters) and Malin Akerman ("Billions", Rampage). Fanning will play a pop star trying to make the jump into acting when she begins to lose her sense of reality when she becomes the victim of a stalker. Akerman will play her agent, a former pop singer herself.

Breaking News: Swim Through the Darkness - Teaser Trailer

With the release of the Steve McQueen-directed and Chad Taylor-penned Swim Through the Darkness rapidly approaching, a teaser trailer has been prepared for the film chronicling the life of singer-songwriter Craig Smith aka Maitreya Kali (played by John Gallagher Jr.).


Monday, May 28, 2018

Now Showing: Triangle

Triangle
Genre: Thriller
Director: Daniel Espinosa
Writer: Clive Steinbeck
Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Edward Norton, Diego Luna

Plot: Steven (Edward Norton) and Clarissa (Jennifer Lawrence), a rich couple who are yachting in the Caribbean to celebrate their anniversary. The yacht is headed from their vacation home in Bermuda to the Bahamas. The freak storm hits the area, sending a giant wave right at the yacht, tipping it onto its side. The lifeboats are capsized by the storm, separting everyone.

Washing up on a deserted island, Clarissa is completely alone until she sees the body of the captain in the water. As she attempts to resuscitate him, Esteban (Diego Luna), a deck hand, appears and also unsuccessfully tries to revive the man. They bury the captain and, under Esteban's guidance, set out to build a shelter and find food.

Two days later, Steven also turns up on the island. Although things go smoothly for a little while, Steven eventually suspects Esteban of having desires on his wife and declares the man his enemy, promising to ruin his life once they get off the island. Esteban responds that Steven had better get home soon, because he can ruin Steven's life right there on the island. This puts Clarissa in the uncomfortable position of her loyalty to Steven conflicting with the realization that they both need Esteban's help to survive. Steven insists that he can provide for them both, but it quickly becomes apparent that he cannot.

Steven steals Esteban's goggles to go fishing one day and when Esteban discovers this, he threatens to kill Steven. Clarissa attempts to get Esteban to calm down and, in a fit of passion, they have sex. Afterwards, Esteban reveals that he has loved Clarissa from the moment he first saw her, but it is also clear that this is a way for him to hurt Steven. Steven returns and sees Esteban and Clarissa together. Steven furiously rejects Clarissa, dragging her by the hair to Esteban's hut so she can live with him.

While fishing, Steven finds a boat on the ocean floor. He drags it to shore and attempts to repair it. Esteban and Clarissa go for a night swim. Afterwards, as they start having sex, Clarissa gives Esteban the idea of stealing the boat so they can get away together from the island and leave Steven behind. They plan to do so while Steven is out fishing. However, they do not get far before the boat begins to sink. They are forced to swim back to the island and to Steven, who attacks the tired Esteban with a spear he has crafted, stabbing him in the back. Clarissa pins Steven to the ground, attempting to kill him with a knife. Esteban, with Steven's spear stuck in his back, picks up a heavy rock to crush Steven with, but he loses his balance and falls backward, impaling himself on the spear.

Some time later, a yachting family drops anchor near the island and explores it, discovering Clarissa asleep in her hut. She leaves with them, but does not mention that Steven is also on the island. Steven, who is fishing, sees her leaving on the yacht and calls out, but Clarissa ignores him, abandoning Steven on the island.


Release: Shōgun

Shōgun
Genre: Historical/Drama
Director: Darren Aronofsky
Writer: Dwight Gallo
Based on the novel by James Clavell
Cast: Brad Pitt, Tadanobu Asano, Rinko Kikuchi, Hiroyuki Sanada, Tohoru Masamune, James Saito, Vincent Perez, Brian Tee, Joaquim de Almeida



Budget: $94,000,000
Domestic Box Office: $71,606,074
Foreign Box Office: $124,810,636
Total Profit: $46,779,727

Reaction: What a great way to start off the latest season. The domestic box office figures had us worried there for a bit, but the film performed very well overseas and on home video.



"While Brad Pitt's accent comes and goes, he still delivers a great lead performance in this well-crafted historical epic." - Glenn Howard, Total Film


"These kinds of fish out of water historical dramas have been done to death. Director Darren Aronofsky gives the film a unique look, but it the story ultimately doesn't add anything to the genre." - Clark Davis, JoBlo.com

"Director Darren Aronofsky, star Brad Pitt and the superb supporting cast deliver a rare historical epic film from Last Resort Films. The details and characterization in Shōgun are incredibly rich." - Lisa Winger, Newsday

Behind the Scenes: Death Dream

Production is starting to wrap up on Death Dream, with its release coming up in Round 2. John Malone has been kind enough to share another couple stills from the film with us. This time we get another look at main character Andy Woodward, played by Best Actor Golden Reel nominee Alden Ehrenreich.




Sunday, May 27, 2018

Now Showing: Shōgun

Shōgun
Genre: Historical/Drama
Director: Darren Aronofsky
Writer: Dwight Gallo
Based on the novel by James Clavell
Cast: Brad Pitt, Tadanobu Asano, Rinko Kikuchi, Hiroyuki Sanada, Tohoru Masamune, James Saito, Vincent Perez, Brian Tee, Joaquim de Almeida

Plot: Paul Blackthorne (Brad Pitt), is aboard the Dutch trading ship Erasmus, when a violent storm causes the ship to crash along the eastern shore of Japan in Anjiro. Blackthorne, the ship's navigator and one of the few survivors of the crew, is taken prisoner by samurai warriors led by Kasigi Omi (James Saito), the local feudal lord. Omi's uncle, Lord Kasigi Yabu (Tohoru Masamune) arrives and puts Blackthorne and his crew on trial as pirates, utilizing a local low-level Jesuit priest to interpret for Blackthorne. After losing the trial, Blackthorne attacks the Jesuit, ripping off his crucifix and snapping it in half. Lord Yabu and the other Japanese present are shocked by the gesture, as they assumed Blackthorne was Catholic like the other Europeans in the area. Lord Yabu sentences Blackthorne and his crew to death, but Omi convinces him to spare them so that they may learn more about European ways from someone who isn't a Catholic missionary.

Omi throws the Erasmus crew into a pit to tame them, and tells them Lord Yabu has ordered Blackthorne to pick one amongst them to die, so that the others may live. Blackthorne leads his crew in a futile resistance, but they are intimidated by Omi. One of them is taken and is boiled alive, to satisfy Lord Yabu, who cruelly enjoys such spectacles. To save the rest of his crew from such savagery, Blackthorne agrees to submit to Japanese authority. Lord Yabu has Blackthorne placed in a household, with his crew continuing to be held hostage to ensure his obedience. Omi suggests to Yabu that they confiscate the guns and money recovered from the wreckage of the Erasmus, but word of this reaches Lord Toranaga, the powerfil president of the Council of Regents. Toranaga sends General Hiro-matsu (Brian Tee) to take Erasmus and the crew to gain an advantage over Toranaga's main rival on the council, Lord Ishido (Hiroyuki Sanada).

Because the Japanese cannot pronounce his name, they call Blackthorne Anjin (Japanese for navigator). After confiscating Erasmus, Hiro-matsu takes Blackthorne and Yabu back to Osaka, where the Council is meeting at Osaka Castle, Ishido's stronghold. They travel on one of Toranaga's boats, piloted by the Portugese pilot Rodrigues (Joaquim de Almeida). Rodrigues tries to kill Blackthorne during a storm by trying to get him to fall overboard when a wave breaks over the deck, but he is swept over himself by the next wave. Blackthorne saves Rodrigues from drowning and safely navigates to ship to Osaka.

At Osaka Castle, Blackthorne is interviewed by Toranage through the translation of Jesuit priest Martin Alvito (Vincent Perez), a sophisitated priest high up in the Jesuit hierarchy. Blackthorne, as an English Protestant, tries to turn Toranaga against the Jesuits, and tells him that the Christian faith is divided and that other European countries intend to sail the Asian waters now that England has defeated the Spanish Armada. Alvito begrudgingly translates this information. Ishido enters the chambers, ending the interview. He is curious about Blackthorne, but Toranaga quickly has Blackthorne thrown into prison to keep him from Ishido.

At Blackthorne's suggestion, a nearby Portuguese ship is asked to lend cannon to blast the boats clear but, in return, the Portugese will only offer aid to Toranaga in exchange for physical custody of Blackthorne. Toranaga agrees and the ship clears the coast. The Portuguese pilot, Rodrigues, repays his debt to Blackthorne by having him thrown overboard to swim back to Toranaga's ship. Toranaga's ship escapes by staying alongside the Portuguese ship as both pass through the gap left between the opposing boats. Toranaga and his party return to his ship, which then goes back to Anjiro.

Blackthorne slowly learns the Japanese language from Lady Mariko and gains an understanding of the Japanese people and their culture. The Japanese, in turn, are torn over Blackthorne's presence, but a turning point is Blackthorne's attempt at seppuku upon finding out that Yabu has threatened the peasants with death if Blackthorne does not learn Japanese within six months. In so doing, he shows his willingness to give up his life in payment for theirs, despite the Christian injunction against suicide. The Japanese prevent this attempt, but they also come to respect him for his knowledge and attempts to assimilate to their culture. During an earthquake, Blackthorne rescues Toranaga from a falling building. In return, Toranaga grants Blackthorne the status of "samurai". During this time Blackthorne also begins to fall in love with Mariko, even though she is married. Blackthorne becomes torn between his love of Mariko, his increasing loyalty to Toranaga, and his desire to return to the seas.

Lord Ishido has Lady Mariko kidnapped and taken to Osaka Castle. He hopes to lure Toranaga into the castle and have the council force him to commit seppuku. At the castle, Mariko defies Ishido and forces him to either dishonor himself or to back down and let her leave. A group of ninja hired by Ishido, aided by Yabu, prepare to kill her, but Blackthorne arrives to try to rescue her. They escape the main area of the castle and into a locked room just before the ninja attack. The ninja prepare to blow the door open with explosives. Blackthorne and Mariko share a kiss as the door explodes open. Mariko is killed by the blast, while Blackthorne is injured and temporarily loses his hearing. Blackthorne manages to escape and reports back to Toranaga that Yabu was involved. Toranaga forces Yabu to commit seppuku for his treachery.

Toranaga has his men help Blackthorne build a new ship so that he may take back to the seas. As Blackthorne and the men put the finishing touches on the ship, Toranaga sets fire to it. He tells Blackthorne that it is his destiny to never leave Japan, Mariko's to die for her lord, and Toranaga's own to eventually become Shogun.


Season 6 Preview


Season 6 will be bit of a change of pace as far as recent seasons are concerned for Last Resort Films. The season doesn't feature any superhero films, something that hasn't happened since the studio's first season. There however will be films based based on some well-known IPs, including a whopping five video game adaptations, two anime adaptations and three sequels. Drama and Sci-Fi are the two main genres for the upcoming season, with 10 films listed under "Sci-Fi" and nine listed under "Drama".

The season's output will be an unheard of 50/50 split between Adaptations and Original Stories, showing that the studio's stable of writers are becoming more and more interested in original pieces. And why shouldn't they be after the success of original films like Cape Torment both at the box office and the awards.

Season 6 will feature films from most of the studio's past writers, although Matt Parker, Mark Newton and Billy Armstrong are absent from the release schedule. The season will see new films from last season's winning writers Mo Buck and John Malone. Buck has penned two films due out in Season 6, while Malone has written two solo and is listed as a co-writer on another - the studio's first film from more than one writer. This upcoming season will also feature the debut of writer Roy Horne, who based on his output since submitting his first pitch, will be around for a while.

Season 6 is looking to be another interesting year in the world of Last Resort Films, so let's get started...

Saturday, May 26, 2018

Season 5 Golden Reel Awards


Welcome to the Season 5 Golden Reel Awards, celebrating the best Last Resort Films releases of Season 5. This season there are 16 different films nominated for the 14 prestigious awards on the line. True crime tale Cape Torment leads the pack with a whopping eight nominations, including Best Picture. The film has become the second most nominated film in the history of the Golden Reel Awards, trailing only Season 3's The Prisoner and it's historic nine nominations (The Prisoner ended up victorious in seven categories, including Best Picture). This season's design concept is based on Season 2's And Then There Were None.



Before the main awards begin, the Last Resort Films Board of Directors has decided to award one individual with the first Golden Reel of Achievement - a special award to recognize an individual talent's contribution to the growth, sustainability and success of the studio. This award will only be given out every five seasons.

The first ever Golden Reel of Achievement is hereby awarded to global superstar actor, producer and performer of death-defying stunts.... Tom Cruise!



Tom Cruise was selected by the Last Resort Films Board of Directors for his contributions to the studio through his work as star and producer of the massively successful Splinter Cell series and Alan Wake. His films have grossed over $3 billion at the box office alone, greatly contributing to the financial stability and well-being of the studio. Here's to Tom Cruise and all of his achievements!

AND NOW FOR THE AWARDS....





AND THE WINNER IS... CAPE TORMENT 


AND THE WINNER IS.... ATLANTIC CITY



AND THE WINNER IS.... THE QUESTION: DARK TOMORROW


AND THE WINNER IS.... COSA NOSTRA


AND THE WINNER IS.... BRADLEY COOPER & MATTHEW McCONAUGHEY -  TRUE WEST


AND THE WINNER IS....  SAM ROCKWELL - COSA NOSTRA


AND THE WINNER IS.... TO THE WHITE SEA


AND THE WINNER IS.... CAPE TORMENT



AND THE WINNER IS.... JULIETTE LEWIS - HATED: THE BALLAD OF GG ALLIN



AND THE WINNER IS.... SAM ROCKWELL - COSA NOSTRA



AND THE WINNER IS.... JESSICA CHASTAIN - SINKHOLE



AND THE WINNER IS.... BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH - CAPE TORMENT



AND THE WINNER IS.... ANDREW DOMINIK - TO THE WHITE SEA



AND THE WINNER IS.... CAPE TORMENT



Congratulations to all of the winners! It was a great fifth season in the world of Last Resort Films and Hollywood Movie Studio. Tune in for Season 6!