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White Oleander was released on VHS and DVD by Warner Home Video on March 11, 2003 and includes special features such as the theatrical trailer, interviews with the cast and creators, behind the scenes footage, deleted scenes, an audio commentary with Peter Kosminsky, John Wells and Janet Fitch, and Cast and Crew film highlights.
White Oleander is a 1999 novel by American author Janet Fitch. In the fashion of a picaresque novel , it deals with themes of motherhood, telling the story of a girl named Astrid who is separated from her mother, Ingrid, and placed in a series of foster homes .
The Flower of Evil (original title: La fleur du mal) is a 2003 French suspense drama film by Claude Chabrol. It tells of an outwardly perfect family in Bordeaux, whose seeming perfection begins to unravel when the wife involves herself in politics. A corpse surfaces just before the local election and the spectre of past family indiscretion ...
Rachel Zegler and Gal Gadot want to be the fairest of them all in Snow White.. On Tuesday, Dec. 3, Disney debuted a full-length trailer for the live-action reimagining of the 1937 animated classic ...
The new trailer for Disney’s live-action remake of “Snow White” has officially released, showcasing more of Rachel Zegler’s vocals, the seven dwarfs and Gal Gadot’s villainous turn as ...
Svetlana Efremova (born 1970; [1] also known as Svetlana Efremova–Reed) [2] is a Soviet-born American stage, film, and television actress as well as an educator. She starred in the American film White Oleander (2002). Efremova teaches acting at California State University, Fullerton (CSUF), where she serves as the head of acting program.
The preview ends with a spooky preview of the Evil Queen's second form, commonly known as the "Old Hag," with a juicy poison apple popping up, too. "I'm sorry, my dear," Gadot's "Old Hag" asks ...
[8] [9] In the 2000s, Donoghue wrote the screenplay for White Oleander (2002). Producer John Wells enlisted Donoghue to adapt White Oleander from the novel of the same name by Janet Fitch. Wells wanted the story to be presented on-screen as fully as possible. [10] Donoghue also co-wrote Veronica Guerin (2003) with Carol Doyle. [11]