You will notice a few strange age discrepancies with a few of our upcoming releases. If you've seen Elle Fanning recently, she looks like she couldn't really pass for a nine year old anymore. We changed the age slightly to make Trisha just a little older, not so much older, but old enough to make Elle at the believable age. We didn't want to make Trisha too much older though, since most of the tension in the film stems from her being a very young child put in a bad situation. She is about 10-11 in the film.
As for Fictitious Images, Chloe Moretz is 13 and has gone through a lot of aging since the film was originally pitched and filmed. Her character is originally supposed to be between the age of 8-10. Many of her scenes were filmed when she was 11 in 2008 and could still easily pass as a 9-10 year old.
Also, a fun fact relating to The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon: In late March/Early April, there was a big news story about a slightly autistic girl who got lost in the woods in Orlando this year. Her name was Nadia Bloom and the idiot reporters kept referring to an American Girl book about one of the characters going out in the woods to explore nature. I found the story to be more related to The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon.
http://www.fox2now.com/lifestyle/stlmoms/ktvi-stlmoms-aspergers-042110,0,2645834.story
Now that Earth 3K2 is finally up, I can pitch the next installment!
As for DVD releases, we now proudly present the film that nobody voted for in the GMAs, even though most critics disagreed: The Orphan Train.
And for those who care about what's playing on those fancy movie channels this week:
HBO 2 is going old school this week with airing our first theatrical release: 72 Hours
Friday, May 28, 2010
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