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Valerie
According to IMDB `s Message Board Chris was casted to play in the upcoming Lifetime Movie "The Perfect Assistant" with Josie Davis and Rachel Hunter. Hope to find some more information soon. Filming started on July 5th.
Jannine
Thank God for you Valerie, otherwise we'd never know what Mr P is up to!!!!

Thank you for being a supersleuth and keeping us abreast of his comings and goings.

Rachel Hunter - the Kiwi model, yes???? hmmmm Okay huh.gif
Valerie
Yes, Rachel Hunter, the model.

Here is the synopsis of the movie:

Spoiler

The Perfect Assistant

As far as I know Chris is going to play Paul.
Jannine
Although it sounds like Rachel is the meatier role, Paul sounds like he has plenty of screen time which calculates to lots of Chris screen time, so that will be awesome!!! biggrin.gif

carolyncooper
Thanks, Valerie, for the news! We really appreciate your keeping us up to date. wub.gif

(I've got to get the "hug" and "cheerleader" smilies imported...)
LInda_J
Thanks for the info, Valerie.

I"m wondering if any of our Canadian friends are going to try to get extra work. Anyone?

Carolyn, you're getting us new smilies? YAY! smile.gif biggrin.gif rolleyes.gif blink.gif wink.gif This could be fun!
Valerie
You are very welcome smile.gif

Carmen
If I get news like this each time I go on vacation I promise to go more often. That movie sounds like a nice role for Chris.
ros
Yay! sounds like a very interesting project for Mr Potter.Thanks for all the information Valerie smile.gif

Love,
Ros
Elise_R
QUOTE(Valerie @ Jul 8 2007, 03:05 AM) [snapback]8891[/snapback]
According to IMDB `s Message Board Chris was casted to play in the upcoming Lifetime Movie "The Perfect Assistant" with Josie Davis and Rachel Hunter. Hope to find some more information soon. Filming started on July 5th.


Well, at least the plot strays a bit from the formulaic dreck of a thousand previous Lifetime movies.

What I'd really like to see Mr. P. in is a role he doesn't describe in interviews as easy or a piece of cake. I'd like to see those gifted acting muscles stretched a bit, maybe almost to the breaking point, in a role that makes the audience stretch, too. I've been spoiled by his previous work in KFTLC, RRG, QAF, Lonesome Dove, and that amazing cameo bit as Mr. Rice in Law & Order: SVU (or SUV, as I keep calling it), which is probably why I've never been a particular fan of Silk, with the exception of "Rage" and the first five minutes of "Forever," or of Wild Card (nice, but too easy).

I respect his private life as private, and all the commitments that brings. Lord knows I see the issues with a kiddo leaving home as I get one ready for college this summer (let's all sing "All My Money's in West Texas" to the tune of George Strait's "All My Exes Live in Texas."). Maybe the solution is for us all to send mp3s of "Wake Up, Little Suzie" together with his resume to all the U.S. and Canadian casting directors we can find.

Hope everyone is having a good summer. Barb, Alicia, Linda, Joan, and all my other Potter Pals, I miss you like crazy.

Regards,
Elise
Valerie
Facts of life remain the same at American Film Market

QUOTE
Facts of life remain the same at American Film Market PDF Print E-mail
Written by Tim Riley
Saturday, 10 November 2007

The French have a saying, “plus ca change, plus c’est la meme chose.” The translation goes, “the more a thing changes, the more it’s the same thing.”


Whoever came up with this axiom may have inadvertently had the foresight to be thinking of the annual American Film Market (AFM), a gathering place for international buyers and sellers of films. The event takes place in the seaside venue of Santa Monica at the Loews Beach Hotel, with its spectacular view of the ocean as well as the famous Santa Monica pier. It’s not the glamorous French Riviera, where the Cannes Film Festival serves as a model for film markets everywhere, including the AFM.


Anyway, back to that French adage, things are looking both the same and different at this year’s American Film Market, where foreign buyers find that their currency, especially euros, has plenty of purchasing power, due to the declining value of the dollar. Since these buyers are looking at America as one big factory outlet, you’d think they would be buying scads of films, considering the writers strike may soon cause a dearth of decent product. Many people that I interviewed seemed to feel that the depressed value of the U.S. currency was not doing much to improve the fortunes of anyone other than local stores selling the usual clothes and trinkets.


Something that will never change, notwithstanding appearances to the contrary, is the nearly insatiable appetite of foreign buyers for horror films. Everywhere you turn during the market, going from one hotel suite to the next, where promotional fliers hawk the products as if you had stumbled upon a huge indoor flea market, the horror titles spring forth as ubiquitous reminders of the AFM’s primary mission.


As a general rule, horror films are so derivative that it is hardly surprising that films are increasingly promoted as imitations of better known works. One horror film called “Gag,” whose promotional tagline is “Dying is easy ... staying alive is torture,” is described in its publicity material as a film in the tradition of “Saw,” and if you only look at the poster art, the image of a terrified face encased in metal clamps should be the tip-off.


One tradition of the AFM has been the unrestrained desire of hordes of Japanese and Koreans anxious to scoop up the horror films, and that seems not to have changed. However, the market is witnessing an increased amount of Japanese-made horror films being offered for sale, and not just ones in the custom of “Godzilla,” though the Japanese horror film “Reigo” features an immense sea monster that looks like a waterborne Godzilla.


The Japanese are also gleefully ripping off famed zombie director George A. Romero, coming up with “Zombie, the Self Defense Force,” a story of the man-eating living dead running wild in the forests near Mount Fuji. The zombie genre remains incredibly popular, judging by the marketplace. “Mutants Fear the Truth” creates zombies from medical experiments gone horribly wrong. Chaos reigns in London in “The Zombie Diaries,” as the undead run amok in the shadow of Big Ben. Even the Italians are getting into the act with “Zombies the Beginning”, in which genetically altered mutants are brought to life.


Women figure prominently in many horror films, and not always as victims. In the British vampire film “The Witches Hammer,” the heroine is brought back from the brink of death by a top secret agency and transformed into a genetically enhanced vampire, only to be trained as a lethal assassin and sent on missions to kill other creatures of the night.


But women are often at risk in these films, such as “Gruesome,” where a college girl is caught up in an endless nightmare when imprisoned by a psychotic killer. The innocent-sounding title “Lilith” belies the horror that awaits five college girls who unwittingly unleash the spirit of a horrible demon while researching obscure pagan beliefs.


It goes without saying that there are plenty of cheesy horror films available, most of them involving a tawdry, but efficiently horrible creature.


“Hogzilla” is one such film, featuring a mutant feral hog believed to weigh over a ton and with an appetite to match, as it snacks on members of a camping party who also have to contend with a band of treacherous poachers. “Supercroc” taps into the fear of crocodiles on the loose, but none as fierce as the prehistoric breed that are unleashed after a massive California earthquake. And let’s not forget the reliable dinosaur, appearing in “Tyrannosaurus Azteca,” that goes on a rampage in the year 1518 when Spanish conquistadors explore a remote, lost valley just inland from the Gulf of Mexico.


One dubious area of female equality appears more frequently in thrillers and even some horror films at AFM. More and more women are cast as the chief villains. The aptly-titled “A Woman’s Rage” is about a beautiful woman having trouble keeping men, as she tends to become very obsessive and jealous. When she loses the man of her dreams, she vows revenge by stealing away the teenage son of his new girlfriend.


“The Perfect Assistant” is the cautionary tale for the married executive who learns his attractive assistant not only kills his wife but develops a fatal attraction more violent than the one realized by Glenn Close. Maybe the strangest case of the deadly female is the one inspired by true events in “Stuck,” wherein a woman (Mena Suvari) hits a homeless man with her car, allowing him to stay stuck in her windshield as she parks the car in her garage and decides to let him bleed to death.


As much fun as it is to check out some of the low-rent movies on offer, there are actually some real quality films sold at AFM and which are likely to show up in mainstream movie theaters. But the latest Paris Hilton film “Bottoms Up” is not one of them.


In even more disappointing news, Steven Seagal returns in “Killing Point” in the role of a homicide detective. How does this guy keep performing mediocre action roles when he must be old enough to collect Social Security?


The answer may not be found at AFM, because apparently some people will buy anything.


Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.



Valerie
Now the movie is already mentioned in the Lifetime Movie List even the link is not working yet. But I think the air date will not be too far away smile.gif

Lifetime Movies T

Edit: The movie will air on January 2nd 2008 biggrin.gif
Jannine
Thanks for the info as always Val.

Val = Supersleuth!!! wink.gif
Valerie
You are very welcome.

Synopsis from Lifetime:

QUOTE
The Perfect Assistant

* Made: 2008
* Genre: Drama
* Stars: Rachel Hunter, Chris Potter, Josie Davis

Rachel (Josie Davis) is the perfect assistant to her boss, Paul. But in the process of assisting Paul, she's fallen hopelessly in love with him. She's never acted on her feelings because Paul is married a beautiful woman named Carmen, and has a young daughter. But when Carmen contracts encephalitis, an impatient Rachel begins to feel that this is her chance to show Paul that she should be the one he comes home to every night. Rachel does her best to help Paul through his wife's illness, gets closer to his daughter, and even orchestrates situations where she can be alone with him. Paul welcomes her help, unknowingly fostering a growing obsession in Rachel that will ultimately end in disaster when she finds out he doesn't feel the same way.


The Perfect Assistant

So now I am waiting for some pics biggrin.gif wink.gif
Jannine
Firstly, I love that her name is Carmen laugh.gif

This plot seems familiar to me... like an old movie I have seen - can't think of the name of it though ... not that I mind!!

Yep, new piccies are always welcome Val.
LJ
Just saw a small pic of CP and Josie Davis from The Perfect Assistant in the Dec. 24th (two-week) edition of TV Guide. The movie was highlighted in the HOTLIST section for Jan. 2nd. Nice to see it's garnering some favorable attention. I'm really looking forward to watching it. biggrin.gif

Lisa J.
Valerie
Wow, that sounds great smile.gif

Unfortunately Lifetime only published a picture of Josie Davis.
Valerie
Here you can watch the trailer of the movie:

Perfect Assistant Trailer

smile.gif
k_ballan@yahoo.ca
QUOTE (Valerie @ Aug 4 2008, 01:25 AM) *
Here you can watch the trailer of the movie:

Perfect Assistant Trailer

smile.gif
did you see the movie. and well they show it on lifetime again. if so can you find out for us thank from kim
from canada ps just asking.
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