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Buttons: A Christmas Tale [1] (also titled Buttons [2] and Buttons: A New Musical Film) [3] is a 2018 American fantasy drama film directed by Tim Janis, and starring Ioan Gruffudd, Jane Seymour, Roma Downey, Abigail Spencer, Dick Van Dyke and Angela Lansbury (in her final film role), [4] with narration by Robert Redford and Kate Winslet.
Imitation General is a 1958 American black-and-white comedy war film in CinemaScope, directed by George Marshall, produced by William B. Hawks, and starring Glenn Ford, Red Buttons, and Taina Elg. The film, distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer , is based on a short story of the same name by William Chamberlain.
The Sounds is a Canadian-New Zealand coproduced television mystery drama series, premiering on Acorn TV and CBC Television in 2020. [1] The series stars Matt Whelan and Rachelle Lefevre as Tom and Maggie Cabbott, a Canadian couple who move to the Pelorus Sound / Te Hoiere region of New Zealand to escape family drama, only for Tom to go missing. [2]
"Buttons" was mixed by Dave Pensado at the Larrabee Sound Studios in Burbank, California, where the tracks where handed to him at different stages. [1] [3] Trans-X Multi plug-in was used on the loop to give it a more transient feeling. Scherzinger's lead vocals were processed through Line 6's Echo Farm by adding distortion. Pensado wanted to ...
The movie, based on a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, was remade in 2006, a version poorly reviewed despite an all-star cast that includes Sean Penn, Jude Law, Kate Winslet and Anthony Hopkins. 28 ...
Other recurring cast members within the DCEU include Amy Adams, Kiersey Clemons, Kevin Costner, Willem Dafoe, Viola Davis, Laurence Fishburne, Amber Heard, Jeremy Irons, Nicole Kidman, Joel Kinnaman, Diane Lane, Jared Leto, Joe Morton, Connie Nielsen, Chris Pine, Michael Shannon, Mark Strong, Patrick Wilson, and Robin Wright.
A coalition of unions representing 13,000 Disneyland workers has filed unfair labor practice charges against Disney over a Mickey Mouse button.
The homegrown awards show subsists entirely on ticket sales, which range from $20 to $40, depending on the time of purchase — and the occasional donation — and has never turned a profit, he said.