| Record breaking Genie Nominations for
March 17, 2004 (Regina, Sask. ) Minds Eye Entertainment (MEE) is pleased to announce that the made-in-Saskatchewan feature film Falling Angels has earned a record breaking six nominations at the 2004 Genie Awards. The film is a co-production of Minds Eye Entertainment and Triptych Media. Falling Angels has earned more nominations this year than all Saskatchewan produced movies combined over the 24-year history of the Genies. The nominations are:
I am pleased to see the local production crew, cast and creative team of Falling Angels acknowledged at the prestigious Genie Awards, says Kevin DeWalt, executive producer of Falling Angels . To receive the third highest amount of nominations of any film in all of Canada is an amazing accomplishment for the Saskatchewan film industry. Hailed as a film that delights and entertains by Elle magazine and a darkly comic gem by Maclean's magazine, Falling Angels is the wickedly funny story of three sisters' coming-of-age in a wildly dysfunctional family, set against the backdrop of the 60s, free love, the Cold War, LSD, and the dawn of feminism. Military dad Jim Field ( Callum Keith Rennie Memento , Flower and Garnet ) rules his home like a tyrant, while mom ( Miranda Richardson The Crying Game , The Hours ) suffers from debilitating depression and is left under the care of her daughters, the rebellious Lou ( Katharine Isabelle Ginger Snaps , Insomnia ), the beautiful Sandy ( Kristin Adams ), and the mousy Norma ( Saskatoon actor Monté Gagné ). Affectionately dubbed Little Women on acid ', this is a story about the destructive effects of secrecy and the bonds of duty between parents and children. Falling Angels is produced with the financial participation of Wild Bunch Sales International, Telefilm Canada - Equity Investment Program (Feature Film Fund), Canadian Television Fund - License Fee Program, Seville Pictures, Universal Studios Canada, Harold Greenberg Fund, Saskatchewan Film Employment Tax Credit, SaskFilm, and the Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit. Canadian licenses include Movie Central, CITY TV and TMN The Movie Network/Super Ecran.
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