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The Lake is a Canadian comedy television series created by Julian Doucet for Amazon Prime Video. The series was Amazon's first scripted Canadian Amazon Original series, and premiered on June 17, 2022. In advance of the official series premiere, the first two episodes received a preview screening at the 2022 Inside Out Film and Video Festival. [1]
EXCLUSIVE: Prime Video’s first scripted Canadian Amazon Original series, The Lake, is getting a second season. Amazon has greenlighted another cycle of the half-hour comedy written and executive ...
In the United States and Canada, Cabrini was released alongside Kung Fu Panda 4 and Imaginary, set for a projected gross of about $8.5 million from 2,840 theaters in its opening weekend. [12] The film made $3.1 million on its first day, including $500,000 from Thursday night preview, ultimately reaching $7.2 million in its first weekend. [13] [14]
In March 2024, Amazon MGM Studios acquired distribution rights and Karl Urban joined the cast. [3] In May, Ismael Cruz Córdova, Safia Oakley-Green and Vedanten Naidoo joined the cast in undisclosed roles. [4] [5] In August 2024, Temuera Morrison, Zack Morris, David Field, Pacharo Mzembe and Gideon Mzembe joined the cast. [6]
Embraced by Q-Anon conspiracy theorists, last year’s “Sound of Freedom” racked up over $250 million worldwide and brought Mexican-born director Alejandro Monteverde back in the spotlight ...
When Oscar-winning producer Jonathan Sanger was first pitched “Cabrini,” the story of the first American saint, he wasn’t quite sure he was right for the project. “I said, ‘I think it ...
The Lake (Kawabata novel), a 1954 novel by the Japanese writer Yasunari Kawabata; The Lake (Yoshimoto novel), a 2015 novel by Japanese writer Banana Yoshimoto "The Lake" (short story), a short story by Ray Bradbury; The Lake, a radio play by Ned Chaillet; The Lake, a school production by The Lakes South Morang P-9 School in Victoria, Australia
Two 11-year-old boys navigate school, friendship, family and change in Minhal Baig’s lyrical drama “We Grown Now.” Baig sets her film in the fall of 1992, a moment in which the promise of ...