Tag: alex-pettyfer

  • ‘Chief of Station’ Exclusive Interview: Aaron Eckhart

    Aaron Eckhart in 'Chief of Station'.
    Aaron Eckhart in ‘Chief of Station’. Photo: Vertical Entertainment.

    Opening in theaters on May 3rd is the new spy thriller ‘Chief of Station,’ which stars Aaron Eckhart (‘The Dark Knight’), Olga Kurylenko (‘Black Widow’) and Alex Pettyfer (’The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Aaron Eckhart about his work on ‘Chief of Station,’ his first reaction to the screenplay, his love for the genre, his character, the fight sequences, and working with Olga Kurylenko and Alex Pettyfer, as well as looking back at the making of ‘Sully’ and working with Tom Hanks and Clint Eastwood.

    Related Article: ‘Silicon Valley’s Chris Diamantopoulos Talks Action Comedy ‘High Heat’

    Olga Kurylenko and Aaron Eckhart in 'Chief of Station'.
    (L to R) Olga Kurylenko and Aaron Eckhart in ‘Chief of Station’. Photo: Vertical Entertainment.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay, and in general, when you are reading scripts and choosing projects, what are you looking for?

    Aaron Eckhart: Well, it’s interesting. I like the cold war era spy movie. I grew up watching it and it’s always intrigued me. Of course, being in Europe, we filmed this in Hungary, and we used the streets, and we used the architecture and that feeling. I really liked those movies. I like the idea of coordinated events of people moving as one to accomplish a goal and that’s what really the spy game is, isn’t it? It’s sleight of hand and coordination and it’s a house full of mirrors, and I really liked that. I’ve always liked it. I grew up on it, and it’s fun to participate in it.

    MF: What are some of your favorite films in the spy thriller genre?

    AE: Well, of course there’s ‘Three Days of the Condor,’ which is the iconic film where the powerful guy behind the curtain is on the other end of the phone giving instructions or telling you in the middle of this city of millions of people on a pay phone that he’s got eyes on you. There’s just something that’s so intriguing about that, and especially with today’s technology. Every spy film I can think of is about how they can implant something, how they can monitor you in some way, and what’s more topical than that right now in terms of cameras, drones, the internet, lasers and radar. All this stuff where they can literally see into your mind and even implant things now. So, the idea of this surveillance state and the idea that they know what you’re thinking always is fascinating, especially as they implant chips and that. So, I’ve always been fascinated by that, the idea of it, what’s true and what’s not true, what is the future? What does it look like? I think it’s good fertile ground for filmmaking.

    Aaron Eckhart and Olga Kurylenko in 'Chief of Station'.
    (L to R) Aaron Eckhart and Olga Kurylenko in ‘Chief of Station’. Photo: Vertical Entertainment.

    MF: In the movie, your character suffers a great loss. Can you talk about who he was before that event, and who he becomes after?

    AE: He loses his wife to a bomb and it’s his fault. It’s the fault of his occupation and her involvement in it. Of course, she’s in it as well but I become the casualty. Before, you’re talking about a man who’s living his life, his occupation, everything, and then you’re talking about deep loss. I mean, there’s not really anything I can say more than that. It’s just, you’re a hollow man. You’re now winding down the days and nothing really feels or tastes the same and that’s where he is at right now. He’s avenging his loss as well and having to deal with the real world as well as the inner world of this darkness that he has.

    MF: Can you talk about that guilt and how it affects his relationship with his son?

    AE: I mean, his son, it’s interesting being a father. I’m not a father, so I couldn’t say, but I could only imagine the idea of a boy losing his mother to a tragic and terrible event, and then having to find his way through life, especially when you have a dad who is away and is not really in touch with his own feelings. His boy drifts off and gets into places maybe where he shouldn’t be, and he goes through his own dark times. They must reconnect and reform a relationship on a different level now. They’ve gone from father-son to more friends and contemporaries, and they must exist on this level now. It’s an interesting dynamic because in a lot of ways, the father feels like a fraud. He let his son down. He’s responsible for his mother’s death in a way, and he’s got a lot of guilt associated with that.

    Aaron Eckhart and Alex Pettyfer in 'Chief of Station'.
    (L to R) Aaron Eckhart and Alex Pettyfer in ‘Chief of Station’. Photo: Vertical Entertainment.

    MF: There is a great scene in the movie where you fight one of the bad guys on a boat. Can you talk about shooting that sequence?

    AE: First, filming in Hungary and Budapest was just amazing and we were on the river there and we were on a riverboat. It is in the middle of the river, and it’s going up and down. It was just fantastic with this beautiful architecture, European history, and we had a great fight coordinator. (I was fighting) the fight coordinator (in that scene) and he was just a great guy. Basically, we worked out that fight that morning. We got to work and he’s like, “Okay, this is what’s going to happen.” We just rehearsed the fight and worked on it throughout the day because we did have a couple other scenes before that. It’s amazing when you have somebody who’s a fighter that you’re working with because you have total trust that he’s going to do the right thing and that you’re going to do the right thing. We just worked out this fight and he beats the crap out of me and I beat the crap out of him, and it was a great day.

    MF: What was it like working with Olga Kurylenko and Alex Pettyfer?

    AE: Well, Alex is great. I love him. He’s a great actor and a great guy. I had a lot of fun with him. I did not know him before, but I just really warmed up to him and we had a good time together. I really appreciate him as a person and as an actor. Very impressive. Olga, of course, was awesome. I worked with her before (‘Erased’). Again, she’s very humble and very giving. She’s willing to do anything for the director and for the scene, which I really appreciated, and is a total professional as well and makes it look good all the time. So really between just those two, it made the days easy and fun. Alex and I had our own fight scene that was punishing. Again, he’s a fighter and can throw a punch and knows how to take a punch, and he’s very giving. You never know how those things are going to turn out because you might go home with some bruises. But we had a good time.

    Tom Hanks and Aaron Eckhart in director Clint Eastwood's 'Sully'.
    (L to R) Tom Hanks and Aaron Eckhart in director Clint Eastwood’s ‘Sully’. Photo: Warner Bros. Pictures.

    MF: Finally, I love ‘Sully’ and think it’s one of Clint Eastwood’s best movies. One of my favorite scenes in the film is when Tom Hanks’ character pulls you into a hallway during the trial sequence and tells your character how proud he is of what you’ve both accomplished and that “We did our job.” Can you talk about shooting that scene with Tom and Clint?

    AE: I’m happy to hear that because it’s a small scene and it’s not a very monumental scene, but it’s leading into the auditorium, which is the big monologue. A couple of things. I loved making that movie. I love Clint. I love Tom. I loved working with them. I love how subtle Tom is and how much trust Clint gives the actors. In fact, I remember one time when we were sitting around that big table having a discussion, I can’t remember which scene it was, but Tom was in it, I was in it, and some other people. Between a take or something, I can’t remember, I said something to Clint about doing it the first time or something like that. Clint goes, “That’s why I cast good actors.” The trust level was off the charts. He just let us do whatever we wanted. He never questioned us, never. It was just amazing. Then Tom was the leader. He took charge and coordinated everything either verbally or non-verbally and we all followed. That scene is a perfect example of that, it epitomizes that, where you have the senior guy coming out, taking charge, and going into the auditorium. A little bit of humor in that scene as well, but “a job well done and we’re going to be okay” and that’s what a leader does.

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    What is the plot of ‘Chief of Station’?

    After learning that the death of his wife was not an accident, a former CIA officer and Station Chief (Aaron Eckhart) is forced back into the espionage underworld, teaming up with an adversary (Olga Kurylenko) to unravel a conspiracy that challenges everything he thought he knew.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Chief of Station’?

    Olga Kurylenko in 'Chief of Station'.
    Olga Kurylenko in ‘Chief of Station’. Photo: Vertical Entertainment.

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  • Movie Review: ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’

    'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare' opens in theaters on April 19th.
    ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ opens in theaters on April 19th. Photo Credit: Daniel Smith.

    Opening in theaters on Friday, April 19th, ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ represents the latest genre hop from Guy Ritchie, who has shown remarkable flexibility of late after starting his career with the cockney gangster likes of ‘Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels’ and ‘Snatch’ before pivoting to movies such as ‘Aladdin’ and his last war pic, ‘The Covenant’.

    This new movie certainly sees him channeling the tone of those initial efforts, but while that provides plenty of thrills and chuckles to begin with, midway through it seems to decide that is not worth sticking with and becomes something more like ‘The Bridge on the River Kwai’ (though never reaching the quality levels of that).

    Related Article: Jake Gyllenhaal and Dar Salim Talk Making ‘Guy Ritchie’s The Covenant’

    Does ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ prove to be a fun mission?

    Alan Ritchson in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'.
    Alan Ritchson in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

    It’s something of a mystery when you have a movie that offers Henry Cavill in particular with the most charismatically entertaining character he’s played in a while (with, unlike in ‘Argylle’, the screentime to fully embrace it) but somehow lose confidence in the jokey tone that is established early on.

    True, the subject of war, especially in a real-life context, is one to be taken seriously, but that later gear switch grinds noisily midway through the running time. And yes, there are the real people to be considered (a closing credit sequence includes imagery and potted histories of the personalities after the time of the mission portrayed), but the two tones of the movie simply don’t mesh well enough to make the whole work.

    ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’: Script and Direction

    Eiza González in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'.
    Eiza González in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

    Ritchie here adapts Damien Lewis (not the actor, different spelling)’s book with the help of Paul Tamasy and Arash Amel, adding his own particular flare to the story of a group of real-life, under-the-radar heroes helped turned the tide of World War II when things were looking their bleakest for the Allied forces.

    But, as we’ve said before in this review, the script’s tone takes a dive somewhere around the point that the mission itself starts to go off the rails. It’s as if the characters shrug off their colorful personalities and adopt much blander, generic war movie archetypes instead. Moments of humor do poke through still, and there are obviously moments where the darker tone requires a more serious approach. The movie, though, doesn’t completely recover.

    In the director’s chair, Ritchie certainly brings plenty of his usual style to the proceedings, and he frequently gets the best out of his cast in the early going. The movie also looks good, the budget clearly up on the screen in scenes where the team engages with battleships or enters the port that is their main objective.

    Yet he still can’t stop his own movie from turning into something that is far less effective in its final third. As the action ramps up (which has its own ticking clock tension, to be sure), the compelling character work fades and some of the interest starts to wane.

    ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’: Performances

    Henry Cavill in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'.
    Henry Cavill in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

    This is most certainly Henry Cavill’s film, and when he’s allowed, he jumps in with both feet. His Gus March-Phillips is a wily, snarky sort, well aware of his reputation even as he’s ready to give his life in service of his country. He’s not above stealing cigars from his superiors or mouthing off to Nazis who are pointing guns at him (and why not?) At full power, he’s the charismatic center of the movie.

    But he’s ably supported by the ensemble, especially Alan Ritchson as the hulking Anders Lassen. Right there with Cavill’s character, he’s always ready to enjoy his missions, and dishes out violence like a funnier ‘Reacher‘.

    Henry Golding has less to do as explosives expert Freddy Alvarez, but he’s handed some fun chunks of scenes, and Golding makes the most of them. Eiza González, meanwhile, has a better character in the early going, but is soon reduced to either being a femme fatale or a damsel in distress.

    From the supporting cast, Babs Olusanmokun stands out as the college educated man of letters who has set himself up as king of the mercenaries in the port where the team has to take out U-boat supply chain. It’s a winning performance and Olusanmokun makes it look effortless.

    Elsewhere, Til Schweiger is suitably menacing/ridiculous as BDSM-obsessed Nazi commander Heinrich Luhr (one of the characters who feels very Ritchie-fied with his verbal diarrhea) and Cary Elwes is a suitably eyebrow-raising “M”.

    ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’: Final Thoughts

    Cary Elwes in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'.
    Cary Elwes in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

    Ritchie’s latest release shows signs of the director warring within himself more than the movie itself is about conflict. It’s as if he started out fully intended to make an engaging romp of an action comedy before a side of him worried about what people would think about the historical accuracy might think.

    The result is a compromised effort that rather falls between two stools –– but has enough value to make it worth sticking out. Especially if you like Henry Cavill sticking his tongue out as a he shoots a machine gun.

    ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ receives 6.5 out of 10 stars.

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    What’s the story of ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’?

    Based upon recently declassified files of the British War Department and inspired by true events, ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’ is an action-comedy that tells the story of the first-ever special forces organization formed during WWII by U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill and a small group of military officials including author Ian Fleming.

    The top-secret combat unit, composed of a motley crew of rogues and mavericks, goes on a daring mission against the Nazis using entirely unconventional and utterly “ungentlemanly” fighting techniques. Ultimately their audacious approach changed the course of the war and laid the foundation for the British SAS and modern Black Ops warfare.

    Who stars in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’?

    • Henry Cavill as Gus March-Phillipps
    • Eiza González as Marjorie Stewart
    • Alan Ritchson as Anders Lassen
    • Henry Golding as Freddy Alvarez
    • Alex Pettyfer as Geoffrey Appleyard
    • Hero Fiennes Tiffin as Henry Hayes
    • Babs Olusanmokun as Mr. Heron
    • Til Schweiger as Heinrich Luhr
    • Henrique Zaga as Captain Binea
    • Cary Elwes as Brigadier Gubbins ‘M’
    • Danny Sapani as Kambili Kalu
    • Freddie Fox as Ian Fleming
    Henry Cavill in 'The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare'.
    Henry Cavill in ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’. Photo: Daniel Smith.

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  • Henry Cavill and Jake Gyllenhaal Join Guy Ritchie’s New Movie

    Director Guy Ritchie has Henry Cavill, Jake Gyllenhaal and Eiza González starring in his new movie.
    Director Guy Ritchie has Henry Cavill, Jake Gyllenhaal and Eiza González starring in his new movie.

    Guy Ritchie has just finished shooting one movie (‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’) and is looking to roll quickly –– or at least before the year is out –– into his next project.

    The new film doesn’t yet have an announced title, but Deadline has learned some information about it; written by the director, it’ll reportedly will revolve around two extraction specialists who must plan an escape path for a high-level female negotiator. And while the subject sounds serious, Ritchie has apparently laced the story with humor.

    Jake Gyllenhaal as Sgt. John Kinley in 'The Covenant,'
    Jake Gyllenhaal as Sgt. John Kinley in ‘The Covenant,’ directed by Guy Ritchie, a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Christopher Raphael / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures. © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Who is in the cast?

    We also know the main cast: Henry Cavill, Jake Gyllenhaal and Eiza González are all on board to star in the movie, which is set to kick off shooting in Spain this summer.

    Here’s what Ritchie had to say about his choices:

    “There’s something special that happens when you collaborate with the same partners regularly: you build a shorthand and a trust that lets everybody do their best work. Jake, Henry and Eiza are all astonishingly talented, committed, and engaging actors. This is going to be an action-packed movie that is both intellectually stimulating and physically exhilarating.”

    And this is just the latest project that represents Ritchie drawing from the pool of people he’s worked with before. Gyllenhaal, of course, was the lead in war drama ‘The Covenant’, which was in theaters just last month. Cavill and González, meanwhile, are part of the sprawling cast for ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’, which also features Alan Ritchson, Cary Elwes, Alex Pettyfer, Henry Golding, Hero Fiennes Tiffin and Freddie Fox.

    That movie’s screenplay, by Paul Tamasy, Eric Johnson (who wrote the original script and pitched it to producer Jerry Bruckheimer back in 2015), Ritchie and Arash Amel, is based on war correspondent and military historian Damien Lewis’ popular book of the same name.

    Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer in film 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,' directed by Guy Ritchie.
    (L to R) Henry Cavill and Armie Hammer in film ‘The Man From U.N.C.L.E.,’ directed by Guy Ritchie.

    Related Article: Jake Gyllenhaal and Dar Salim Talk Making ‘Guy Ritchie’s The Covenant’

    What is the plot of the movie?

    The movie, inspired by real events, will chart British Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s and James Bond creator Ian Fleming’s secret World War II combat organization. The clandestine squad’s unconventional and entirely ‘ungentlemanly’ fighting techniques against the Nazis helped change the course of the war and in part gave birth to the modern Black Ops unit.

    Cavill, of course, has a connection with the director that goes even further, since he co-starred in 2015’s ‘The Man from U.N.C.L.E.’.

    Also on Ritchie’s schedule? Overseeing post-production on ‘The Gentlemen’ the spin-off TV series from his eponymous 2019 crime caper.

    With the new movie at a very early stage, there’s no release date set yet, but the distribution rights are on sale now at the Cannes Film Market (should anyone have a spare few million dollars lying around). ‘The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare’, meanwhile, should be out next year.

    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal (left) and director Guy Ritchie (right) on the set of 'The Covenant.'
    Actor Jake Gyllenhaal (left) and director Guy Ritchie (right) on the set of ‘The Covenant,’ a Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film. Credit: Christopher Raphael / Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures. © 2023 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Netflix’s ‘The I-Land’ Trailer Is ‘Lost’ Meets ‘Cabin in the Woods’

    Netflix’s ‘The I-Land’ Trailer Is ‘Lost’ Meets ‘Cabin in the Woods’

    Netflix

    The age old “nature vs. nurture” debate gets a few new twists in “The I-Land,” a Netflix series that draws inspiration from several other pop culture properties to form its own mysterious concoction.

    A trailer parodying the much-maligned Fyre Festival introduces viewers to the titular locale, a seemingly-idyllic tropical destination that’s touted as “an immersive experience so exclusive, captivating, and breathtaking, once you arrive, you’ll never leave.” 

    It soon becomes clear that The I-Land is no paradise, and the 10 people who find themselves stranded there have no memory of how they arrived — or even who they are.

    The show’s official synopsis warns of the ominous fate that awaits them:

    “Faced with the I-Land’s extreme psychological and physical challenges, they must rise to their better selves — or die as their worst ones.”

    The clip offers a taste of the horrors to come (one shrieking woman has seemingly lost her hand in a gruesome accident), but ends with an even more twisted revelation: All of this is being monitored — and seemingly manipulated — by someone else. It’s like if “Lost” and “Cabin in the Woods” had a baby.

    “The I-Land” stars Natalie Martinez (“Under the Dome”), Kate Bosworth (“Superman Returns”), Michelle Veintimilla (“Gotham”), Alex Pettyfer (“Magic Mike”), Sibylla Deen (“The Last Ship”), Kyle Schmid (“Being Human”), Ronald Peet (“Defectives”), Kota Eberhardt (“Dark Phoenix”), Anthony Lee Medina (“Flesh and Bone”), and Gilles Geary (“Spirit Warriors”). It washes up on Netflix on September 12.

  • Netflix Announces Three New Sci-Fi Series, Including Kate Bosworth’s ‘The I-Land’

    Netflix Announces Three New Sci-Fi Series, Including Kate Bosworth’s ‘The I-Land’

    Kate Bosworth in The Domestics
    Orion Classics

    Kate Bosworth, Alex Pettyfer, and Natalie Martinez (“The Crossing,” “Under the Dome”) star in one of the three new sci-fi drams coming to Netflix.

    The I-Land” comes from Neil LaBute, and will be directed by Jonathan Scarfe. It will mark Pettyfer’s TV series debut. Bosworth is on board as producer. (The photo above is from her most recently movie, “The Domestics“)

    “The I-Land” will have seven episodes. See more details below, but stay tuned for an official release date — plus a trailer, photos, etc.

    Netflix gave 10 episodes to the two other new series announced: “October Faction” and “Warrior Nun.”

    Netflix has been upping its sci-fi game since “Stranger Things” became such a hit, and pushed sci-fi/fantasy to the top of users’ list of favorite genres. “Maniac” with Emma Stone and Jonah Hill is a recent (and incredible) release in that genre. Netflix also has several other previously announced series ahead — including “Locke & Key” and Ian Somerhalder’s “V Wars,” among others.

    Here are Netflix’s details about the three new series ahead:

    “The I-Land”

    The I-Land is a new sci-fi action adventure series. When 10 people wake up on a treacherous island with no memory of who they are or how they got there, they set off on a trek to try to get back home. They soon discover this world is not as it seems. Faced with the island’s extreme psychological and physical challenges, they must rise to their better selves — or die as their worst ones.

    Kate Bosworth (The Long Road Home, Still Alice) stars as KC and serves as a producer on the series. Natalie Martinez (The Crossing, APB, Secrets and Lies, Under the Dome) will star as Chase. Alex Pettyfer (Magic Mike, Endless Love) will star as Brody.

    Production Company: Nomadic Pictures Entertainment

    Showrunner / Director / Writer: Neil LaBute (Billy & Billie, Van Helsing)

    Director: Jonathan Scarfe (Van Helsing)

    Writer: Lucy Teitler (Mr. Robot)

    Executive Producers: Chad Oakes (Fargo, Hell On Wheels) and Mike Frislev (Van Helsing, Wu Assassins)

    Co-Executive Producer: Lucy Teitler and Jonathan Scarfe

    Producers: Kate Bosworth (Nona)

    *****

    “October Faction”

    Building on the IDW comic book series, October Faction follows globetrotting monster hunters Fred and Deloris Allen who, after the death of Fred’s father, return to their hometown in upstate New York with their teenage children Geoff and Viv. As the family adjusts, Fred and Deloris must hide their identities as members of a secret organization, and our heroes quickly discover that their new small-town setting isn’t as idyllic as it seems.

    October Faction is produced by High Park Entertainment in association with IDW Entertainment. IDW Entertainment is the worldwide distributor (excluding Canada) for the series.

    Creator / Showrunner / Executive Producer: Damian Kindler (Sleepy Hollow, Krypton)

    Directors: Director X (Superfly, Mister Tachyon, Across the Line), Damian Kindler, Megan Follows (Reign, Anne of Green Gables), Mina Shum (Meditation Park, Ninth Floor) and David Frazee (Vikings, Orphan Black)

    Executive Producers: James Thorpe, Steve Niles, Thomas Walden, Eric Birnberg and Steve Niles

    Co-Executive Producers: George Strayton and Melissa Blake (Sleepy Hollow, Heroes)

    Producers: John Calvert (X Company, Anne with an E) and Mohamad El Masri (Here and Now)

    *****

    “Warrior Nun”

    Inspired by the Manga novels, Warrior Nun revolves around a 19 year-old woman who wakes up in a morgue with a new lease on life and a divine artifact embedded in her back. She discovers she is now part of an ancient order that has been tasked with fighting demons on Earth, and powerful forces representing both heaven and hell want to find and control her.

    Writer / Showrunner / Executive Producer: Simon Barry (Ghost Wars, Continuum)

    Consulting Producer: Amy Berg (Counterpart, Da Vinci’s Demons)

    Co-Executive Producer: Terri Hughes Burton (The 100, Eureka)

    NWEPs: Stephen Hegyes (White Noise, 50 Dead Men Walking)

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