«We'll still be working with private studios across the country when we need to record authors in their hometowns, or
find local actors who are perfect for a book, and given our level of production, we'll still be recording books with partner studios in Toronto,» said producer Ann Jansen who joined PRH from CBC Books.
Not exact matches
The complementary currency itself has declined in importance over the period while levels of overall consumption of goods and services have increased (although it is unclear whether the recent digitisation is to change this) A detailed study18 of the usage and circulation of the Palma
found that around half of its usage was accounted for by just 6 economic
actors in addition to the Banco Palmas itself: four
local stores selling basic consumer items, the neighbourhood petrol station, and a party and décor shop.
In their latest, the remarkable young French
actor Adèle Haenel plays Jenny, a sensitive but no - nonsense
local doctor consumed with guilt when a young prostitute is
found dead by the river near her office.
Language: English Genre: Biography / Drama MPAA rating: R Director: Gus Van Sant
Actors: Joaquin Phoenix, Jonah Hill, Rooney Mara Plot: Based on a true story: a slacker survives a near - fatal car accident and, on the path to sobriety,
finds a talent for drawing irreverent, often controversial, comics for the
local paper.
Language: Korean Genre: Crime / Drama MPAA rating: R Director: Joon - ho Bong
Actors: Bin Won, Ku Jin, Hye - ja Kim Plot: When her mentally disabled son is accused of murder, his over protective mother takes on
local hoods and a corrupt police department to
find the killer.
But the longer they stay waiting for Harry's call, the more surreal their experience becomes, as they
find themselves in weird encounters with
locals, tourists, violent medieval art, a dwarf American
actor (Jordan Prentice) shooting a European art film, Dutch prostitutes, and a potential romance for Ray in the form of Chloë (Clémence Poésy), who may have some dark secrets of her own.
We
found a lot of concern among government
actors about unregulated, possibly ideologically motivated, schools operating under the radar, while
local communities
found these schools more open and accessible because they were close and taught lessons in Arabic, rather than in English and French, which are used in public Lebanese schools.