Recently, CBS delivered the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "Person Of Interest" episode 18 of season 4. The episode is entitled, "Skip," and it turns out that we're going to see some very intriguing and dramatic stuff as Reese has to deal with trying to protect a bounty hunter that has no problem with getting herself into life-threatening situations, and more! In the new, 10th episode press release: Reese is going to try to protect a bounty hunter who refuses to let the threat to her life, get in the way of tracking her target. Press release number 2: Reese will have to protect a bounty hunter who refuses to let the potential threat to her life, deter her from the relentless pursuit of her target. Also, Finch will try to set the plan he began in Shanghai in motion. Guest stars feature: Katheryn Winnick (Frankie Wells), Ato Essandoh (Ray Pratt), Louis Lourens (Mr.
- 3/10/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
NewRoz Films
First-time writer-director-producer Jay Jonroy, an emigre from Kurdistan, has a strong personal connection to his material in David & Layla. Not everyone in his family escaped Iraq's killing fields; he pays tribute to the region's murdered souls through a why-can't-we-all-get-along romantic comedy set in New York. At the heart of the tale is a real-life Jewish-Muslim love story that Jonroy heard from an acquaintance, and though he's clearly inspired by it, he doesn't know how to distill his themes into a compelling narrative. Broad strokes far outweigh the moments of insight and delight.
The script makes rather clumsy work of their romance's fitful progress, but leads David Moscow and Shiva Rose are engaging. He plays the host of a cable access show titled Sex and Happiness, and she's the stunning, chaste Kurdish beauty who keeps walking through his on-the-street shoots. When he gets up the nerve to pose one of his impertinent questions to her, she responds with a stinging slap across the face. The pursuit is on, despite -- or because of -- David's surgically enhanced, shrill-to-the-point-of-insane girlfriend (Callie Thorne). His opinionated French cameraman (a very good Alexander Blaise) offers encouragement -- and Ecstasy.
Layla has 30 days to marry a citizen before immigration officials deport her. Her aunt and uncle (Anna George, Ed Chemaly) have a dull doctor in mind, but they're willing to entertain the possibility of David as a suitor. Then they learn that he's Jewish. His over-the-top parents (Polly Adams, Peter Van Wagner), meanwhile, assume that Layla is a Sephardic Jew, a big enough leap for his surprisingly provincial Realtor mother.
With the help of obvious but lovely music cues, Jonroy sets the scene of the Hasidic and Muslim neighborhoods in Brooklyn where the story unfolds. He's better with atmosphere and visuals than with dialogue, which tends toward the expository. When the characters aren't spouting Middle Eastern history, Jonroy inserts documentary footage on TV screens. There's no question that this recent history matters; Layla's immediate family was gassed by Saddam Hussein's regime. But all the on-the-nose lessons, the quotes from the Torah and the Koran, the philosophizing and kvetching will wear down most viewers in this overlong film.
First-time writer-director-producer Jay Jonroy, an emigre from Kurdistan, has a strong personal connection to his material in David & Layla. Not everyone in his family escaped Iraq's killing fields; he pays tribute to the region's murdered souls through a why-can't-we-all-get-along romantic comedy set in New York. At the heart of the tale is a real-life Jewish-Muslim love story that Jonroy heard from an acquaintance, and though he's clearly inspired by it, he doesn't know how to distill his themes into a compelling narrative. Broad strokes far outweigh the moments of insight and delight.
The script makes rather clumsy work of their romance's fitful progress, but leads David Moscow and Shiva Rose are engaging. He plays the host of a cable access show titled Sex and Happiness, and she's the stunning, chaste Kurdish beauty who keeps walking through his on-the-street shoots. When he gets up the nerve to pose one of his impertinent questions to her, she responds with a stinging slap across the face. The pursuit is on, despite -- or because of -- David's surgically enhanced, shrill-to-the-point-of-insane girlfriend (Callie Thorne). His opinionated French cameraman (a very good Alexander Blaise) offers encouragement -- and Ecstasy.
Layla has 30 days to marry a citizen before immigration officials deport her. Her aunt and uncle (Anna George, Ed Chemaly) have a dull doctor in mind, but they're willing to entertain the possibility of David as a suitor. Then they learn that he's Jewish. His over-the-top parents (Polly Adams, Peter Van Wagner), meanwhile, assume that Layla is a Sephardic Jew, a big enough leap for his surprisingly provincial Realtor mother.
With the help of obvious but lovely music cues, Jonroy sets the scene of the Hasidic and Muslim neighborhoods in Brooklyn where the story unfolds. He's better with atmosphere and visuals than with dialogue, which tends toward the expository. When the characters aren't spouting Middle Eastern history, Jonroy inserts documentary footage on TV screens. There's no question that this recent history matters; Layla's immediate family was gassed by Saddam Hussein's regime. But all the on-the-nose lessons, the quotes from the Torah and the Koran, the philosophizing and kvetching will wear down most viewers in this overlong film.
- 7/24/2007
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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