Recently, CBS released the new,official synopsis/spoilers for their upcoming "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" episode 16 of season 15. The episode is entitled, "The Last Ride," and it turns out that we're going to see the team get involved with a murder case that features fancy rides and a chrome-covered victim, and more. In the new, 16th episode press release: The CSI team will investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a Chrome-Covered victim. Press release number 2: The CSI team is going to investigate a death involving a vintage Rolls Royce and a chrome-covered victim. Guest stars features: Alimi Ballard (Detective Kevin Crawford), James Aldridge (Coroner Asst. Jimmy), Blair Bomar (Ava Montrose), Wil Traval (Carlo Derosa), Travis Schuldt (Aron Derosa), Matthew Glave (Ken Bixler), Karen Sillas (Ruth Montrose), Tracy Fraim (Duncan Reidel), Vito D'Ambrosio (Alfonz Derosa) and Benjamin Plessala (Young Aron Derosa). The episode was written by Gavin Harris,...
- 1/25/2015
- by Andre Braddox
- OnTheFlix
More from the Garden State: De Rosa Searchs For Romantic Eccentricities
Director Carlo De Rosa’s debut feature is yet another addition to the long list of films about a down-on-his-luck guy who falls for a quirky girl who miraculously gets him out of his comfort zone and saves him from a life of loneliness. Finding Joy is plagued with cliches so much that it would be easy to refer to it as Garden State 2.0 or Seeking a Friend for the End of the World minus the imminent, probably redemptive, destruction of the planet. In fact, the two protagonists uncannily resemble Steve Carell and Keira Knightley. De Rosa desperately tries to create the illusion of having well-developed characters by adding random eccentricities to each one of the supporting roles.
The premise is basic. Kyle (Josh Cooke) is a writer who hasn’t found much success and must go back home...
Director Carlo De Rosa’s debut feature is yet another addition to the long list of films about a down-on-his-luck guy who falls for a quirky girl who miraculously gets him out of his comfort zone and saves him from a life of loneliness. Finding Joy is plagued with cliches so much that it would be easy to refer to it as Garden State 2.0 or Seeking a Friend for the End of the World minus the imminent, probably redemptive, destruction of the planet. In fact, the two protagonists uncannily resemble Steve Carell and Keira Knightley. De Rosa desperately tries to create the illusion of having well-developed characters by adding random eccentricities to each one of the supporting roles.
The premise is basic. Kyle (Josh Cooke) is a writer who hasn’t found much success and must go back home...
- 6/7/2013
- by Carlos Aguilar
- IONCINEMA.com
Like the kid who discovers Silly Bandz are cool and comes to class wearing a sleeve of them, the creators of Finding Joy seem to have gotten whatever memo is encouraging Zooey Deschanel-style "quirkiness" to be worn as a badge of honor. Carlo De Rosa's comedy bears some resemblance to Garden State, although it's a little less depressing and more random in its oddities. Kyle (Josh Cooke), a "boy next door gone wrong" writer, struggling with his second book, comes back home when he can no longer mooch off his friends. That means staying with his "wacked" family, who he hasn't visited since his mother's death: his agoraphobic father, dad's sex-addicted ladylove, a closeted cross-dressing brother, a shrew of a sister-in-law, and, the only sane one, his aspiring novelist niece...
- 6/5/2013
- Village Voice
"What have you accomplished" whispers the little voice in my head. Constant questions about my life and my purpose run through my head and I wonder, dear reader, if you have ever had the feeling that you weren't in control of your life? Or that the voices in your head were unusually loud? Perhaps, there was a narrator to your life? If you answered yes, to any of the questions above or the little voice in your head said "What questions?", then you must go see Carlo De Rosa's latest film Larsen (Feedback). This delightful short was the winner of the Grand Jury Award for Best Short Film at both the Beverly Hills Film Festival and the Efebo Corto Film Festival in Italy, and has been warmly received all across the world. From Spain to India, from Africa to Norway, audiences...
- 6/1/2010
- by Lauren Selman
- Huffington Post
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