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"The Lord of the Rings" will be
a blockbuster film, according to a critic who saw it ahead of its London
premiere on December 10.
"The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship
of the Ring," based on J.R.R. Tolkien's classic fantasy novel, compared
favorably to the current Harry Potter movie, David Ansen said in the online
edition of Newsweek on Tuesday.
"It has real passion, real emotion, real
terror and a tactile sense of evil that is missing in that other current
movie dealing with wizards, wonders and wickedness," he said. The
film, which goes on general release on December 19, is the first in a
trilogy it cost $295 million to make.
Ansen likened Cate Blanchett's elven queen
to "art nouveau kitsch," while Sir Ian McKellen is "playfully
magisterial" as wise wizard Gandalf and Sean Bean gives a "passionate"
performance as warrior Boromir. But the AOL Time Warner production, filmed
in director Peter Jackson's native New Zealand, would be a hit.
"This review is coming to you from a
Tolkien-free zone. I went in to Peter Jackson's movie, the first of a
trilogy, with no preconceptions. I came out, three hours later, sorry
I'd have to wait a year to see what happens next in Frodo Baggins's battle
against the Dark Lord, Sauron, and thinking a trip to the bookstore to
pick up 'The Two Towers' might be in order."
"The Lord of the Rings" has sold
100 million copies and was voted the book of the 20th century in many
millennium polls.
Actor-comedian Tom Green has formed
his own production company, Bob Green Films, and signed a three-year,
first-look film and television deal with Regency Enterprises.
The deal reunites him with Regency, which
produced this year's comedy feature "Freddy Got Fingered" starring
Green from a script he co-wrote and on which he made his directorial debut.
More recently, Green teamed with Regency to develop a half-hour variety
series for the WB Network set in the world of skateboarding. The show
has received a put pilot commitment from the network.
BGF -- named after Green's uncle, who Green
says is a spiritual inspiration for the company -- is comprised of Green
and senior vp Ken Fineman, who will oversee film and television projects.
BGF has already sold an untitled feature comedy pitch to Regency that
Green will write, direct, produce and star in.
Additionally, Green's longtime writing partner
Derek Harvie and collaborator Phil Giroux have been brought into the BGF
fold as talents to developing film and television projects, respectively.
Harvie co-wrote "Freddy" and wrote and produced "The Tom
Green Show" for MTV, on which he also appeared. Giroux also appeared
on the show.
Green and his company are repped by WMA and
attorney Stuart Rosenthal. Green next stars opposite Jason Lee in Revolution
Studios/Imagine Entertainment's comedy feature "Promises, Promises"
(aka "Stealing Stanford").
Fineman comes to BGF from WMA, where he worked
under such motion picture talent and literary agents as John Fogelman
and Rob Carlson.
The studio separately acquired two romantic
comedy projects -- one pitch and one spec -- inspired by the Charles Dickens
classic "A Christmas Carol." New Line picked up the high-concept
pitch "35 to Life" from writing duo Steven Gary Banks
and Claudia Grazioso and the spec "Untitled Valentine's
Day Project" from 24-year-old first-time feature writer Austin
Winsberg with management production company Benderspink on
board to produce.
Banks and Grazioso will now write a script
based on their pitch, which centers on a commitment-phobic guy who, on
the eve of his girlfriend's parents' 35th anniversary, is visited by the
ghosts of relationships past, present and future. No producers are attached.
Winsberg's project is described as "A
Christmas Carol" set against Valentine's Day. His project will be
overseen by New Line's Richard Brenner and creative executive Cale Boyter.
Benderspink will produce through their production deal at the studio.
New Line director of development Carolyn
Manetti brought in the Banks/Grazioso project and will oversee its
development along with New Line's Kent Alterman, senior vp production,
and Keith Goldberg.
Since pairing up 15 months ago, Banks and
Grazioso have sold four projects: "Are We There Yet" to Revolution
Studios for Happy Madison to produce; "The Other Billy Drake"
to the Robert Evans Co.; "Coeds" to Warner Bros., Material and
Gaylord Films; and "R.S.V.P." to Lakeshore. Both are repped
by ICM's Nicole Clemens with Grazioso additionally repped by Palomar's
Ragna Nervik and Banks additionally managed by Brad Kaplan.
Winsberg, repped by Benderspink and WMA, is
part of the writing team on Kevin Williamson's WB series "Glory Days"
and is putting the finishing touches on his second untitled romantic comedy
script.
Nathan Lane will star as Jackie Gleason
in "To the Moon," a biopic about the jocular thesp. Rob
Festinger ("In the Bedroom") is writing the script, which
is being developed by Mirage Enterprises, the production company
run by directors Sydney Pollack and Anthony Minghella.
Gleason, immortalized on "The Honeymooners,"
was discovered on Gotham's nightclub circuit by Jack Warner and starred
in several Hollywood pictures and Broadway musicals before making his
TV debut.
"Jackie Gleason has been a huge influence
on me since I was a child," Lane said. "The thing that gets
to me about him is that despite the bravado of his public persona and
the broad hilarity of some of his comedy, there remains a tremendous amount
of sadness and vulnerability in his eyes. Hopefully we will explore that
in the film."
The multiple Tony award-winning thesp originally
optioned William A. Henry III's Gleason biography, "The Great One,"
as a blueprint for the project. But he has since decided to take it in
a different direction.
"We're not interested in doing a linear
biopic with the fat kid in the snow waiting for the father who never comes,"
Lane said.
Though Neil LaBute originally circled the
project, development has been "a painstaking process," said
David Rubin, a Mirage executive who is also producing. "The trick
was to find a writer who has as much an appreciation of Gleason, the comedy
star, as an appreciation for the period, the pathology and theatricality
of the movie we wanted to make."
Writer-director Chris Noonan will direct
the romantic comedy/fantasy project "The DisAssociate" for MGM
and studio-based producer Lindsay Doran, marking the helmer's first feature
gig since directing 1995's "Babe."
A late spring start is being eyed on the closely
guarded project, which is described as the story of an ordinary man who
has the opportunity to become extraordinary. Zach Helm wrote the script
and is currently penning another draft.
Noonan's involvement on the project comes
two months after it first was set up at the studio by Doran through her
Three Strange Angels production company .
In town for meetings on "DisAssociate,"
the Australian helmer said he first met Doran during the 1996 awards season
and has wanted to work with her ever since. In 1996, Noonan's "Babe"
was nominated for seven Academy Awards, winning an Oscar for best visual
effects and a Golden Globe for best picture, comedy/musical, while the
Doran-produced "Sense and Sensibility" was also nominated for
seven Oscars, winning for adapted screenplay, and nabbed Golden Globes
for screenplay and dramatic picture.
"The kind of thing I was looking for
(since directing 'Babe') is what the entertainment industry doesn't routinely
produce," Noonan said. "And this is a completely original screenplay
unlike anything I've ever read -- and the fact that it came from Lindsay
made it even more appealing."
Added Doran: "I was really eager to find
something to work with Chris on, and I knew that it would take something
really special to attract his attention. ('The DisAssociate') seemed to
have all the qualities that he wanted: It's really funny, really emotional
and really original, and if you describe 'Babe' you would use those same
words."
Doran and Noonan are working on finalizing
a budget with MGM and are discussing casting.
Noonan, repped by UTA and attorney Linda Lichter,
is developing several projects, including "Rule of the Bone"
with Barry Mendel.
Doran stepped down from her post as president
and chief operating officer of United Artists in June 1999 to segue to
a producing deal with MGM. She also recently set up the sexy thriller
"Provocative," written by Steve Barancik, at DreamWorks Pictures
Bruce Greenwood, Stanley Tucci
and Delroy Lindo will join Hilary Swank, Aaron Eckhart,
DJ Qualls and Tcheky Karyo on their journey to the center
of the Earth in Paramount Pictures' sci-fi drama "The Core,"
directed by Jon Amiel. Shooting starts this month.
The story follows a group of space shuttle
astronauts who discover that the Earth has stopped rotating because of
a change in the planet's core temperature. To restore the normal temperature,
they must travel to the center and detonate a nuclear bomb.
David Foster, Sean Bailey and Cooper Layne
are producing "Core" with co-producer David Householter from
a script by Layne and a recent rewrite by John Rogers.
Greenwood, repped by the Gersh Agency and
manager Chuck Binder, recently wrapped shooting on Guy Ritchie's "Swept
Away," in which he stars opposite Madonna. He has two movies slated
for release next year: Miramax Films' "Ararat" and Dimension
Films' "Below." His other feature credits include "Thirteen
Days," "Rules of Engagement" and "Double Jeopardy."
Lindo, repped by WMA and Brillstein-Grey,
stars in DreamWorks' "The Last Castle," opposite Robert Redford
and James Gandolfini, and in Warner Bros.' "Heist," opposite
Danny DeVito and Gene Hackman. His other credits include "The Cider
House Rules" and "Romeo Must Die."
Tucci, repped by CAA, most recently starred
in "America's Sweethearts." He is onscreen in Paramount Classics'
"Sidewalks of New York" and next stars in a string of features
including the Walt Disney Co.'s "Big Trouble" and DreamWorks'
"The Road to Perdition."
Rapper Eve will make her feature acting debut
opposite rapper-actor Ice Cube in MGM's comedy "Barbershop"
for first-time director Tim Story. Rounding out the barbershop quartet
are comedians Cedric the Entertainer and Anthony Anderson. Shooting begins
Jan. 15.
"Barbershop" is an ensemble dramedy
that takes place during the course of one day at a barbershop in Chicago's
South Side. Ice Cube will star as Calvin, the shop's proprietor, with
Eve as sassy shopworker Terri, who is getting two-timed by her boyfriend.
Cedric is set to play Eddie, who at 70 is
the oldest barber in the shop, which is why nobody wants to get their
hair cut by him. Anderson plays an ill-fated thief whose encounter with
an ATM machine ends up in the barbershop's favor. Sources said Sean Patrick
Thomas ("Save the Last Dance") also is in talks for a role in
the project.
George Tillman and Robert Teitel's State Street
Pictures is producing along with Ice Cube's production company, CubeVision.
Mark Brown wrote the script, with a rewrite by Don D. Scott. Brown also
will get a producing credit. CubeVision's Matt Alvarez is executive producing
with Brown's manager Larry Kennar.
Eve is repped by WMA and Untitled Entertainment's
Jason Weinberg. The Philadelphia-born rap star, whose real name is Eve
Jihan Jeffers, has worked with such hip-hop legends as Dr. Dre and DMX.
Through DMX, she became part of the Ruff Ryders crew and first appeared
on their "Ryde or Die" release. In 1999, she released her first
full-length album, "Eve: First Lady of the Ruff Ryders." Signed
to Interscope, her latest release is "Scorpion."
Cedric is repped by CAA and manager Eric Rhone.
Anderson is repped by WMA and Principato-Young Management.
Helmer Matt Williams is on board to
direct 20th Century Fox's contemporary adaptation of the 1950 comedy "Cheaper
By the Dozen."
Williams, who made his feature directorial
debut on the Fox dramedy "Where the Heart Is" starring Ashley
Judd and Natalie Portman, is also set to executive produce "Cheaper"
through his Wind Dancer banner along with company president Susan
Cartsonis.
The project has been in development for some
time at 1492 Pictures, the company behind the current boxoffice
champ "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone." 1492 company
principals Chris Columbus, Michael Barnathan and Mark
Radcliffe are producing "Cheaper" along with the project's
original rights holder Ben Myron.
Williams has turned down a slew of feature
projects since directing last year's "Heart," but after reading
the Sam Harper-penned adaptation of "Cheaper" he decided
to come on board.
"It's a rollicking comedy that adults
will relate to and kids will enjoy because it's about a contemporary American
family faced with the reality of juggling kids, a marriage and two careers
-- this is what I do every day," Williams said. "And I'm excited
to work with Fox again; I've had a great relationship with them through
making 'Where the Heart Is' and I look forward to working closely with
1492."
The original film -- directed by Walter Lang
and released by Fox -- starred Clifton Webb and Myrna Loy in the true-life
story of the Gilbreth family and their often amusing struggle to keep
it all together with a family of 12 children. "Cheaper" was
based on the book by Frank B. Gilbreth and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey and
produced by Lamar Trotti.
TCF's Vanessa Morrison, vp production, is
overseeing the contemporary adaptation for division topper Hutch Parker.
Through Wind Dancer, Williams and Cartsonis
produced last year's Mel Gibson, Helen Hunt starrer "What Women Want"
for Paramount Pictures. Williams is also on board to direct Wind Dancer/Winchester
Films' "Daughter of the Queen of Sheba," which Gwyneth Paltrow
and Meryl Streep are attached to star in (HR 3/9), and at Fox, Williams
and Wind Dancer are developing the projects "10th Justice" and
"Rich Deceiver."
Williams made a name for himself as a writer-executive
producer on the hugely successful TV series "Roseanne" and "Home
Improvement." Williams, Columbus and 1492 are all repped by CAA.
After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Steven
Soderbergh no longer had the stomach for the tentative title of his next
film.
Originally called "How to Survive
a Hotel Room Fire," the film has been renamed "Full Frontal,"
said Soderbergh, who found the previous title inappropriate after the
fiery images at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
"It seemed not so funny after Sept. 11,"
Soderbergh told The Associated Press in a telephone interview during a
break from shooting the movie.
Soderbergh also scrapped a plot device that
would have used a series of placards with tips on surviving hotel fires.
"I just tossed out that whole idea,"
said Soderbergh, who had dual best-director Oscar nominations for "Erin
Brockovich" and "Traffic" at this year's Oscars, winning
for the latter movie.
"Full Frontal" features "Brockovich"
star Julia Roberts, David Duchovny, Catherine Keener, David Hyde Pierce
and Blair Underwood. Roberts also co-stars in Soderbergh's "Ocean's
Eleven," opening Friday.
Soderbergh described "Full Frontal"
as a cross between his debut film, "sex, lies and videotape,"
and his manic satire "Schizopolis," with the "energy of
the latter and the narrative coherence of the former."
Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group (CTMPG) has acquired
worldwide distribution rights excluding Asia and France to Highbinders,
the latest Asian-financed action adventure to star Jackie Chan. The film,
which is backed by Emperor Multimedia Group (EMG), recently wrapped a
portion of its shooting schedule in Ireland and is now moving to Hong
Kong and then Thailand for additional principal photography.
The epic film
teams Chan with an international cast including Lee Evans, Claire Forlani,
Julian Sands, Christy Chung, John Rhys-Davies and Anthony Wong. He plays
a Hong Kong detective who uncovers an international smuggling ring and
follows its trail to Dublin where he teams up with an eccentric British
Interpol agent (Evans).
Gordon Chan is
directing the film which is produced by Alfred Cheung from a screenplay
by Cheung, Bennett Joshua Davlin, Bey Logan and Paul Wheeler.
The project was
brought in to CTMPG by vice president of acquisitions Benedict Carver;
CTMPG vice president of business affairs Matthew Dixon negotiated with
EMG. EMG head of international distribution May Yip handled negotiations
on behalf of EMG, together with co-producer Tim Kwok, who first brought
the project to CTMPG's attention.
EMG chairman Albert
Yeung is executive producer of the film along with Willie Chan and Jackie
Chan. "We are delighted to be working with Columbia Tristar on Highbinders,"
said Yeung in a statement. "I have no doubt that the company will
give our film the kind of prestigious, high-profile international release
it deserves."
"Jackie Chan
is a megastar whose fan base extends all over the world," said CTMPG
executive vice president Clint Culpepper. "We think this picture,
which is one of the biggest productions ever to be financed by a Hong
Kong company, will appeal to Jackie's existing American and overseas audience,
as well as to viewers who haven't yet discovered his winning combination
of wit and action."
Chan starred in
one of the year's biggest domestic hits Rush Hour 2 and will next
be seen in DreamWorks SKG's The Tuxedo. He works both in Asia and
Hollywood, and after Highbinders is scheduled to star in Spyglass
Entertainment's Shanghai Knights, a sequel to Shanghai Noon.
Milica Kastner, formerly at Helkon SK, has teamed with Yvonne Michael,
previously at Phantom Pictures, to form London-based production company
MiKast Movies.
The company has
a debut slate including a remake of the 1969 film Royal Hunt Of The
Sun and Darkness Visible, a contemporary thriller set in Hawksmoors
London.
Additionally,
Traffic Hearts is about four days during a hot London summer, while
Mabel is set in the lawless Los Angeles of the 1920's. CrossKiller
is a contemporary thriller set in Los Angeles, while Dirty Laundry
is a modern-day melodrama.
Kastner, daughter
of veteran US producer Elliott Kastner, worked in acquisitions and development
at Helkon. Michael was a producing partner at Phantom Pictures with credits
including Mr In Between and Baby Juice Express.
Munich-based private
media fund Film & Entertainment VIP Medienfonds is preparing to place
its second fund with a volume of between Euros 10m and a maximum Euros
100m.
Private individuals
will be invited between December 15, 2001 and October 31, 2002 to invest
a minimum of Euros 25,000 each into the VIP Medienfonds 2 fund which aims
to co-produce internationally marketable features with budgets between
$ 2m and $ 15m.
So far, among
the projects shortlisted by VIP Medienfonds 2 - but not yet contractually
finalised - are Nobels Son to be produced with Skyler Entertainment;
and Scapegoat, based on a script by Blake Edwards, which will be
produced by Geoffrey Edwards, John Michaels, and Jeff Tinnell.
VIPs first
fund was launched in July to raise between Euros 10m and Euros 40m for
financing two features the dramatic comedy Waiting For Godofsky
and the family drama The Harvest and the TV entertainment
format True Or False?
Specialty distributors, which look to the
holiday season with visions of kudos dancing in their heads, may find
the going a little tricky this year.
For one thing, since few Oscar favorites have
emerged, the major studios will be aggressively pushing late releases
as last-gasp hopes for Oscar-nomination glory. Also, the holiday season
is unusually full of star-studded studio releases of the sort likely to
gain Academy attention on one front or another.
Nonetheless, niche distributors will be crossing
their fingers for dozens of late-year limited openers.
"The start of the awards season affords
the opportunity to launch pictures successfully in Los Angeles and New
York on the basis of strong reviews," enthused Tom Ortenberg, president
of Lions Gate Releasing.
Last year, specialty distributor Sony Pictures
Classics' Chinese-language "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon"
began a platformed release in early December that played well into the
new year; the film gathered four Oscar wins, including foreign-language
picture.
The approach has become a well-established
pattern for specialty distributors, and enthusiasm for the strategy is
as high as ever this year, since there is no single standout in the late-year
specialty field. Take, for example, the following:
- Miramax, which pursues awards nods with
unique fervor, has five limited bows -- plus wide openers -- carefully
lined up throughout December like so many precious gems.
- Disney has Wes Anderson's "The Royal
Tenenbaums" scheduled for platformed expansions through 2001's final
three weeks, with a star-heavy ensemble cast representing a possible kudos
magnet.
- Basking in early raves from the fest circuit,
USA Films' "Gosford Park," from director Robert Altman, starts
an Academy-consideration run in Gotham and L.A. Dec. 26.
- Warner Bros.' "Charlotte Gray"
looks to build on the adult-skewing fan base of Sebastian Faulks' novel
about Nazi-occupied France with a staged offensive that begins Dec. 28
with limited rollouts in Gotham, L.A. and Toronto.
- Sony Classics believes its top candidate
for a foreign-language picture nod this year is "Dark Blue World,"
a WWII romancer from Czech helmer Jan Sverak ("Kolya"), which
unspools Dec. 28 in L.A. and Gotham.
- Lions Gate hopes to exploit early good notices
for thesp turns and other creatives on its Anthony LaPaglia/Geoffrey Rush
starrer "Lantana," an Aussie production that won several Australian
Film Institute kudos.
The Canadian firm is also anxious to attract
favorable attention for the script penned by Will Rokos and Milos Addica
for soon-to-bow "Monster's Ball," a prison drama toplined by
Billy Bob Thornton, Halle Berry, Heath Ledger and Sean Combs. "Lantana"
hits L.A. and Gotham mid-month, and "Monster" mashes the same
markets a couple weeks later.
"Our enthusiasm on both pictures begins
with the terrific performances by the cast, but they both have the opportunity
for even wider recognition," Ortenberg said.
But he's not counting any chickens just yet.
"There will be many pictures that open
with thoughts of awards recognition, but then come and go very quickly
because their respective distributors misjudged them," he said.
But the small fry must battle the majors,
which have loaded December with prestige pictures and star vehicles. The
list includes the following:
- Warner Bros.' "Ocean's Eleven,"
which sports a cast full of A-list thesps.
- New Line's visually lustrous tentpole fantasy
"The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring," set for
near-worldwide release just before Christmas. The studio also has the
Sean Penn/Michelle Pfeiffer starrer "I Am Sam."
- Golden Globe (but never Oscar) winner Jim
Carrey toplines Warner Bros./Castle Rock's "The Majestic," an
Academy-friendly romantic comedy that unspools nationwide Dec. 21.
- Sony has the much-hyped Will Smith starrer
"Ali" bowing wide Dec. 25.
- Tom Cruise and Penelope Cruz topline Paramount's
"Vanilla Sky," from Oscar winner Cameron Crowe.
- Universal/Imagine's "A Beautiful Mind"
-- set for a limited bow Christmas Day -- is a cerebral drama with top
production values representing a perfect vehicle for star Russell Crowe,
who, along with oft-middlebrow helmer Ron Howard, is likely to fetch Academy
attention.
- Miramax has a limited Christmas launch set
for its high-profile Kevin Spacey/Judi Dench starrer "The Shipping
News."
Surveying the holiday season, Miramax marketing
president Mark Gill cautioned: "In the absence of a great movie,
you (will fail). The competition is extreme."
Still, Sony Classics VP of sales Tom Prassis
said specialty distributors know that sending a picture out in December
means it will play to receptive audiences.
"It's certainly a good time to launch,
because there are a lot of people looking for something to go see,"
Prassis said. "People tend to go to the movies more than once this
time of year, just as they do in the summer."
Meanwhile, Miramax's specialty platformers
include several possible foreign-language Oscar contenders. Those include
offbeat French-language picture "Amelie," which debuted in November
and is set for expansion throughout December.
"In almost every case, we're looking
at these (end-of-year) pictures as worthy of consideration for awards
or critical citations," Miramax's Gill said. "I wish it were
true that there was also a tremendous focus on movies in this terrain
in March or May or June, but it just isn't so."
Virgin Records is pleased to announce the
release of the original soundtrack to the compelling, French film Brotherhood
Of The Wolf (Le Pacte De Loups), on January 8th. The film's dark and
haunting theme is beautifully echoed through the music composed by Joseph
LoDuca.
Brotherhood Of The Wolf (Le Pacte De Loups),
an epic thriller set in sixteenth century France during the reign of Louis
XV, is inspired by true-life events. The film revisits a rare French myth
about the "Beast of Gevaudan," a mysterious creature that lives
along the countryside in a rural part of France, and kills scores of women
and children. The beast is unseen, displays enormous strength and possesses
near-human intelligence, and has eluded capture for years. The King sends
a renowned scientist and an unconventional team to bring the creature
down, but they soon discover that the true nature of the beast is more
shocking than anyone could have anticipated.
Released in France on January 31, 2001, the
film broke the box office record of $1.4 million formerly held by "Titanic"
by grossing a spectacular $1.5 million on its opening day, and went to
earn more than $35,000,000 in its native country.
Universal Pictures will release Brotherhood
Of The Wolf (Le Pacte De Loups) in select theatres in the United States
on January 11, 2002. Further information on the film can be found at www.brotherhoodofthewolf.net
Joseph LoDuca has composed and produced scores
for both film and television since 1982. He composed the soundtracks for
"Evil Dead" and "Evil Dead 2" and has composed music
for "Xena: Warrior Princess," "Cleopatra 2525" and
"Jack Of All Trades." LoDuca also scored "Hercules: The
Legendary Journeys," "Young Hercules" and the critically
acclaimed "American Gothic." The track listing for Brotherhood
Of The Wolf (Le Pacte De Loups) is as follows:
-
Le Loup Blanc/ Gevaudan
-
Mani et les Gitans
-
La Chasse / L'Abbaye en Ruine/ Image Paienne
-
La Dame des Neiges
-
La Tessier / Sylvia / Le Sorcier / La Succube
-
L'Arrivee de Beauterne
-
Deduction / Reminiscence
-
La Bergere / Retour au Gevaudan / Le Maitre
-
Chasse a la Bete
-
Le Combat de Mani / La Mort Infame
-
La Danse des Couteaux
-
L'Antre de la bete / Le Bucher
-
La Mort de Fronsac
-
Lait Empoisonne
-
Les Masques Tombent
-
Le Fantome
-
Le Duel Sauvage
-
Judgment
-
Purification
-
Epilogue
-
"Once" performed by Felicia Sorenson
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