The original Mighty Morphin Blue Ranger is suiting back up.
David Yost will reprise his role as Billy Cranston in the series Power Rangers Cosmic Fury, premiering Friday, Sept. 29 on Netflix, it was announced on Thursday. Watch the show’s new theme song/opening credits, featuring new cast addition Yost, above.
More from TVLineFellow Travelers: Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey's Decades-Spanning Romantic Drama Gets Paramount+ Release DateChucky and SurrealEstate Set Fall Premiere DatesTVLine Items: Prince Harry's Invictus Series, Fast X Hits Peacock and More
In what is the landmark 30th season of the franchise, “Lord Zedd has escaped, and...
David Yost will reprise his role as Billy Cranston in the series Power Rangers Cosmic Fury, premiering Friday, Sept. 29 on Netflix, it was announced on Thursday. Watch the show’s new theme song/opening credits, featuring new cast addition Yost, above.
More from TVLineFellow Travelers: Matt Bomer and Jonathan Bailey's Decades-Spanning Romantic Drama Gets Paramount+ Release DateChucky and SurrealEstate Set Fall Premiere DatesTVLine Items: Prince Harry's Invictus Series, Fast X Hits Peacock and More
In what is the landmark 30th season of the franchise, “Lord Zedd has escaped, and...
- 8/17/2023
- by Vlada Gelman
- TVLine.com
Stars: Fernando Cayo, Manuela Vellés, Ana Wagener, Guillermo Barrientos, Dritan Biba, Martijn Kuiper, Xoel Yáñez, Luis Iglesia | Written by Miguel Ángel Vivas, Javier García | Directed by Miguel Ángel Vivas
This Spanish film is the figurative definition of ‘thriller’ (I get told off by my housemate for misuse of literality). Jaime (Fernando Cayo) has just moved to an a beautiful new house with his wife, Marta (Ana Wagener), and daughter, Isa (Manuela Vellés) and already arguments are starting as Isa wants to skip the families first meal together in her new home to meet her boyfriend. None of that matters, however, as the house is broken into that night be three masked men. The leader takes down the card details of each of them and takes Jaime on a drive to get money out while Marta and Isa are left with the other two; one of them a bit crazy and the other very skittish.
This Spanish film is the figurative definition of ‘thriller’ (I get told off by my housemate for misuse of literality). Jaime (Fernando Cayo) has just moved to an a beautiful new house with his wife, Marta (Ana Wagener), and daughter, Isa (Manuela Vellés) and already arguments are starting as Isa wants to skip the families first meal together in her new home to meet her boyfriend. None of that matters, however, as the house is broken into that night be three masked men. The leader takes down the card details of each of them and takes Jaime on a drive to get money out while Marta and Isa are left with the other two; one of them a bit crazy and the other very skittish.
- 11/12/2014
- by Nicky Johnson
- Nerdly
Kidnapped
Directed by Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written By: Javier García, Miguel Ángel Vivas
2011, Spain
Kidnapped begins with an unsettling sequence in which a battered and bloody man, with his hands bound behind his back, staggers through the woods blinded by a plastic bag tied over his head. The shocking overture without a doubt grabs the audience attention right away, with an incredibly well executed long take. The man gasps and stumbles his way onto the side of the road where he is rescued from suffocation by a driver who nearly runs him over. As the title card appears, we know we are about to witness something technically astounding, but Kidnapped’s complete lack of character development or plotting beyond the initial setup exposes the film for what it is: A sadistic, unmotivated home-invasion flick.
Director Miguel Ángel Vivas’ home-invasion drama joins an increasingly growing sub genre populated by such hits as Funny Games,...
Directed by Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written By: Javier García, Miguel Ángel Vivas
2011, Spain
Kidnapped begins with an unsettling sequence in which a battered and bloody man, with his hands bound behind his back, staggers through the woods blinded by a plastic bag tied over his head. The shocking overture without a doubt grabs the audience attention right away, with an incredibly well executed long take. The man gasps and stumbles his way onto the side of the road where he is rescued from suffocation by a driver who nearly runs him over. As the title card appears, we know we are about to witness something technically astounding, but Kidnapped’s complete lack of character development or plotting beyond the initial setup exposes the film for what it is: A sadistic, unmotivated home-invasion flick.
Director Miguel Ángel Vivas’ home-invasion drama joins an increasingly growing sub genre populated by such hits as Funny Games,...
- 8/5/2011
- by Ricky
- SoundOnSight
Reviewed by Samantha Perez
(June 2011)
Directed by: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written by: Miguel Ángel Viva and Javier García
Starring: Fernando Cayo, Manuela Vellés, Ana Wagener, Guillermo Barrientos, Martijn Kuiper and Dritan Biba
Best Horror Feature winner at Fantastic Fest 2010, Miguel Ángel Vivas’ film about a family’s first night in their new home gone wrong may leave audiences in a total state of shock.
Jaime (Fernando Cayo) and Marta (Ana Wagener) have just moved to a remote gated community in Madrid. Their teenage daughter Isa (Manuela Vellés) is not happy about the transition; she constantly and unapologetically fights with her mother. As the family prepares to celebrate their first night in the new house, three men break in and take them hostage. One man takes Jaime out to collect cash from various ATMs in town while the other two stay behind with the women to torment them.
What the family...
(June 2011)
Directed by: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written by: Miguel Ángel Viva and Javier García
Starring: Fernando Cayo, Manuela Vellés, Ana Wagener, Guillermo Barrientos, Martijn Kuiper and Dritan Biba
Best Horror Feature winner at Fantastic Fest 2010, Miguel Ángel Vivas’ film about a family’s first night in their new home gone wrong may leave audiences in a total state of shock.
Jaime (Fernando Cayo) and Marta (Ana Wagener) have just moved to a remote gated community in Madrid. Their teenage daughter Isa (Manuela Vellés) is not happy about the transition; she constantly and unapologetically fights with her mother. As the family prepares to celebrate their first night in the new house, three men break in and take them hostage. One man takes Jaime out to collect cash from various ATMs in town while the other two stay behind with the women to torment them.
What the family...
- 6/18/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
Reviewed by Samantha Perez
(June 2011)
Directed by: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written by: Miguel Ángel Viva and Javier García
Starring: Fernando Cayo, Manuela Vellés, Ana Wagener, Guillermo Barrientos, Martijn Kuiper and Dritan Biba
Best Horror Feature winner at Fantastic Fest 2010, Miguel Ángel Vivas’ film about a family’s first night in their new home gone wrong may leave audiences in a total state of shock.
Jaime (Fernando Cayo) and Marta (Ana Wagener) have just moved to a remote gated community in Madrid. Their teenage daughter Isa (Manuela Vellés) is not happy about the transition; she constantly and unapologetically fights with her mother. As the family prepares to celebrate their first night in the new house, three men break in and take them hostage. One man takes Jaime out to collect cash from various ATMs in town while the other two stay behind with the women to torment them.
What the family...
(June 2011)
Directed by: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Written by: Miguel Ángel Viva and Javier García
Starring: Fernando Cayo, Manuela Vellés, Ana Wagener, Guillermo Barrientos, Martijn Kuiper and Dritan Biba
Best Horror Feature winner at Fantastic Fest 2010, Miguel Ángel Vivas’ film about a family’s first night in their new home gone wrong may leave audiences in a total state of shock.
Jaime (Fernando Cayo) and Marta (Ana Wagener) have just moved to a remote gated community in Madrid. Their teenage daughter Isa (Manuela Vellés) is not happy about the transition; she constantly and unapologetically fights with her mother. As the family prepares to celebrate their first night in the new house, three men break in and take them hostage. One man takes Jaime out to collect cash from various ATMs in town while the other two stay behind with the women to torment them.
What the family...
- 6/18/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Year: 2010
Directors: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Writers: Miguel Ángel Vivas/Javier García
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: agentorange
Rating: 8 out of 10
Nice middle class families being terrorized by violent thugs is a staple of the horror genre. From the street gangs of Death wish to the upper-class, post-modern angst of Michael Haneke's Funny Games there's always been room to play with the terrifying notion and twist its parts around to come up with something new and consistently shocking.
Kidnapped is the latest Spanish export grabbing festival goers by the balls and it adds an entirely new layer of realism to the experience of this kind of movie. In what must have been a laborious process of staging and choreography, it makes you endure an entire night's home invasion in as close to real-time as you can probably get. This technique means that there is absolutely no escape from enduring...
Directors: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Writers: Miguel Ángel Vivas/Javier García
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: agentorange
Rating: 8 out of 10
Nice middle class families being terrorized by violent thugs is a staple of the horror genre. From the street gangs of Death wish to the upper-class, post-modern angst of Michael Haneke's Funny Games there's always been room to play with the terrifying notion and twist its parts around to come up with something new and consistently shocking.
Kidnapped is the latest Spanish export grabbing festival goers by the balls and it adds an entirely new layer of realism to the experience of this kind of movie. In what must have been a laborious process of staging and choreography, it makes you endure an entire night's home invasion in as close to real-time as you can probably get. This technique means that there is absolutely no escape from enduring...
- 6/13/2011
- QuietEarth.us
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