Four-time Grammy nominee Kelsea Ballerini has agreed to handle hosting duties for the fourth consecutive year with the 2024 CMT Music Awards. Ballerini will go it solo, guiding the Country music-driven awards show on Sunday, April 7th live from Austin, Texas’ Moody Center. The awards show will air on CBS and stream on Paramount+ at 8pm ET/PT (tape-delayed on the West Coast).
Ballerini is also confirmed to perform during this year’s broadcast.
Ballerini began her CMT Music Awards hosting run in 2021 alongside Kane Brown. Ballerini followed that gig up in 2022 by remotely hosting the show during the Covid pandemic. She and Brown returned in 2023 to host the show live.
“I couldn’t be more excited to be back for my fourth year with my CMT family to host this year’s CMT Music Awards in Austin, Texas. Hosting an awards show that celebrates the music that the fans love most has been an honor and I know this year will be another unforgettable night,” stated Kelsea Ballerini.
This year’s executive producers include Margaret Comeaux (CMT), John Hamlin (Switched On Entertainment), Leslie Fram (CMT), and Jason Owen (Sandbox Entertainment). Nominees and performers will be announced soon.
Matthias Schoenaerts and Kate Winslet in ‘The Regime’ (Photograph by Miya Mizuno/HBO)
Max’s March 2024 streaming lineup includes the premiere of The Regime starring Oscar winner Kate Winslet as a paranoid chancellor with major control issues. The streaming service’s March slate also includes the debut of The Girls on the Bus starring Melissa Benoist, Carla Gugino, Natasha Behnam, and Christina Elmore as political journalists.
Documentaries A Revolution on Canvas and The Lionheart along with the comedy docuseries Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show will premiere in March 2024. And Wonka and Dream Scenario make their streaming debuts.
SERIES & FILMS ARRIVING ON MAX IN MARCH 2024
March 1
127 Hours (2010)
Alvin and The Chipmunks: The Road Chip (2015)
Baby Mama (2008)
The Ballad of Lefty Brown (2017)
The Best Man Holiday (2013)
Bullet Head (2018)
Cabaret (1972)
Captain Fantastic (2016)
Deadpool (2016)
Dear White People (2014)
Dope (2015)
The Expendables (2010)
The Expendables 2 (2012)
The Expendables 3 (2014)
The Farewell (2019)
Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008)
Fruitvale Station (2013)
Godzilla (2014)
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019)
Good Time (2017)
The Green Knight (2021)
Horrible Bosses (2011)
Hot Air (2019)
King Kong (1933)
Kong: Skull Island (2017)
Last Christmas (2019)
The Last Witch Hunter (2015)
Lean On Me (1989)
Leatherheads (2008)
Love Beats Rhymes (2017)
Me and Earl and The Dying Girl (2015)
Nine Lives (2016)
Observe and Report (2009)
Ocean’s 11 (1960)
Ocean’s Eight (2018)
Ocean’s Eleven (2001)
Ocean’s Twelve (2004)
Ocean’s Thirteen (2007)
On Chesil Beach (2018)
Pulling Strings (2013)
Rambo (2008)
The Revenant (2016)
Royal Crackers, Season 2 (Adult Swim)
Scream (1996)
Scream 2 (1997)
Scream 3 (2000)
Selling The Hamptons, Season 2
She’s Out of My League (2010)
Shut In (2016)
Sinister (2012)
Sleepless In Seattle (1993)
Son of Kong (1933)
Still Alice (2014)
Straight Outta Compton (2015)
X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)
Yes Man (2008)
Zookeeper (2011)
March 3
OWN Spotlight: Oprah & Angela Bassett (OWN)
Small Town Potential (HGTV)
The Regime (HBO Original)
The Regime tells the story of life within the walls of a modern authoritarian regime as it begins to unravel. After not leaving the palace for quite some time, Chancellor Elena Vernham (Kate Winslet) has grown increasingly paranoid and unstable when she turns to a volatile soldier, Herbert Zubak (Matthias Schoenaerts), as an unlikely confidant. As Zubak’s influence over the chancellor continues to grow, Elena’s attempts to expand her power eventually result in both the palace and the country fracturing around her. The limited series stars Kate Winslet, Matthias Schoenaerts, Guillaume Gallienne, Andrea Riseborough, Martha Plimpton, and Hugh Grant.
March 4
Rock the Block, Season 5 (HGTV)
Seeking Sister Wife, Season 5 (TLC)
Spring Baking Championship, Season 10 (Food Network)
Wardens of the North, Season 2 (Animal Planet)
March 5
A Revolution on Canvas (HBO Original)
In HBO Original documentary A Revolution on Canvas, a political thriller and verité portrait documentary, producers and directors Sara Nodjoumi and Till Schauder dive into the mystery surrounding the disappearance of more than 100 “treasonous” paintings by Sara’s father, seminal Iranian modern artist Nickzad “Nicky” Nodjoumi. Brimming with emotional undercurrents, A Revolution on Canvas follows Sara as she traces a timeline of events, discovering her father’s ongoing activism, his complicated relationship with her mother, artist Nahid Hagigat, and how the implications of his incendiary art impacted the trajectory of their family’s future together.
March 6
My 600-Lb. Life, Season 12 (TLC)
On The Case with Paula Zahn, Season 27 (ID)
March 7
The Dog House: UK, Season 5 (Max Original)
March 8
Care Bears: Unlock the Magic: Grumpy’s Ginormous Adventure (Special)
Gold Rush: White Water (Discovery Channel)
A Star Is Born (2018)
Tiny Toons Looniversity, Season 2A (Cartoon Network)
Tiny Toons Looniversity: Spring Break (Special)
Wonka (2024)
Warner Bros. Pictures’ Wonka, from Paul King, David Heyman, and producers Alexandra Derbyshire and Luke Kelly, will make its streaming debut exclusively on Max. Starring Timothée Chalamet in the title role, the film introduces audiences to a young Willy Wonka, as he becomes the world’s greatest inventor, magician, and chocolate-maker.
March 11
Lakefront Empire (HGTV)
March 12
7 Little Johnsons, Season 14 (TLC)
Fixer To Fabulous: Italiano (HGTV)
The Many Lives of Martha Stewart (CNN Original)
Wildcard Kitchen (Food Network)
The Lionheart (HBO Original)
HBO Original sports documentary The Lionheart, directed and produced by filmmaker Laura Brownson, is an intimate portrait of a family navigating the loss of legendary race car driver Dan Wheldon. In 2011, the two-time Indianapolis 500 champion nicknamed “The Lionheart,” died in a horrific crash at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, shaking the world of motorsports to its core. Ten years later, his two sons, Sebastian and Oliver, supported by their mother and Dan’s widow Susie, follow in their father’s footsteps as they work through their loss the only way they know how – getting behind the wheel to race.
March 13
Vacation (2015)
Christina Elmore, Melissa Benoist, Carla Gugino, and Natasha Behnam in ‘The Girls on the Bus’ (Photograph by Nicole Rivelli/Max)
March 14
Justice, USA (Max Original)
The Girls on the Bus (Max Original)
Max Original drama series The Girls on the Bus invites viewers to hit the campaign trail alongside four female journalists, each of them different in their reporting styles and personalities. The story centers on Sadie McCarthy (Melissa Benoist), a journalist who romanticizes a bygone era of campaign reporting and scraps her whole life for a shot at covering a presidential candidate for a paper of record. Sadie joins the bus and eventually bonds with three female competitors, Grace (Carla Gugino), Lola (Natasha Behnam), and Kimberlyn (Christina Elmore). Despite their differences, the women become a found family with a front-row seat to the greatest soap opera in town – the battle for the White House.
March 15
90 Day Fiancé: Pillow Talk, Season 10 (TLC)
Mini Beat Power Rockers, Season 1-4A (Discovery LATAM)
Dream Scenario (2023) (A24)
In A24’s Dream Scenario, starring Nicolas Cage, Julianne Nicholson, Michael Cera, Tim Meadows, Dylan Gelula, Dylan Baker, hapless family man Paul Matthews (Cage) finds his life turned upside down when millions of strangers suddenly start seeing him in their dreams. But when his nighttime appearances take a nightmarish turn, Paul is forced to navigate his newfound stardom, in this wickedly entertaining comedy from writer-director Kristoffer Borgli and producer Ari Aster.
March 16
The Pioneer Woman, Season 36 (Food Network)
March 17
90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After?, Season 8 (TLC)
Mary Makes It Easy, Season 3 (Food Network)
Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV (ID)
March 19
Contraband: Seized at the Border, Season 3 (Discovery Channel)
March 21
Down Home Fab, Season 2 (HGTV)
House Hunters: All Stars (HGTV)
March 23
Design Goals (Magnolia Network)
March 25
Lethally Blonde (ID)
Mean Girl Murders, Season 2 (ID)
March 26
Bugs Bunny Builders, Season 2A (Cartoon Network)
March 28
Ghost Adventures: Screaming Room, Season 3 (Discovery Channel)
March 29
Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives, Season 47 (Food Network)
Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show (HBO Original)
The HBO Original comedy docuseries Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show centers on Carmichael’s personal life, following him through encounters with friends, family, and strangers, all in his quest for love, sex, and connection.
March 30
Guy’s Ranch Kitchen, Season 7 (Food Network)
Will Hochman continues his guest starring role as Joe Hill on CBS’s Blue Bloods season 14 episode three. Directed by Ralph Hemecker from a script by Kevin O’Reilly and Jack Ciapciak, episode three – “Fear No Evil” – will air on Friday, March 1, 2024 at 10pm ET/PT.
Tom Selleck returns to lead the final season’s cast as Frank Reagan. Donnie Wahlberg stars as Danny Reagan, Bridget Moynahan plays Erin Reagan, Will Estes is Jamie Reagan, Len Cariou is Henry Reagan, Marisa Ramirez plays Maria Baez, and Vanessa Ray stars as Eddie Janko.
“Fear No Evil” Plot: Frank grapples with the personal loss of his best friend and how best to help Tess Ross (Simone Policano), the daughter of his best friend, when she lands in jail. Also, Jaime and his nephew, Joe Hill (Will Hochman), race against the clock to reunite a trafficking victim with her sister; and Danny and Erin clash when she goes behind Danny’s back to use his criminal informant in an investigation.
Blue Bloods is a drama about a multi-generational family of cops dedicated to New York City law enforcement. Frank Reagan is the New York Police Commissioner, and heads both the police force and the Reagan brood. He runs his department as diplomatically as he runs his family, even when dealing with the politics that plagued his unapologetically bold father, Henry, during his stint as chief.
A source of pride and concern for Frank is his eldest son, Danny, a seasoned detective, family man, and Iraq War vet who on occasion uses dubious tactics to solve cases with his partner Detective Maria Baez. Erin, the middle daughter, is a New York assistant D.A. who serves as the legal compass for her siblings and father. Jamie is the youngest Reagan, a Harvard Law graduate, and the family’s golden boy. Unable to deny the family tradition, Jamie decided to give up a lucrative future in law and follow in the family footsteps as a cop. He’s found a friend and ally in his wife, Eddie, who keeps him on his toes and has very different reasons than the Reagans for joining the police force.
AMC’s new teaser for Interview with the Vampire shows Louis sitting down with Daniel and then confessing he doesn’t remember what really happened in Paris. The network also unveiled a short clip (embedded below) featuring Louis, Claudia, Armand, and Daniel.
Returning season one stars include Jacob Anderson as Louis de Pointe du Lac, Sam Reid as Lestat de Lioncourt, and Eric Bogosian as Daniel Molloy. Assad Zaman returns as Armand, Ben Daniels is back as Santiago, and Delainey Hayles takes over the role of Claudia.
“The interview continues in season two. In the year 2022, the vampire Louis de Pointe du Lac (Anderson) recounts his life story to journalist Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian). Picking up from the bloody events in New Orleans in 1940 when Louis and teen fledgling Claudia (Hayles) conspired to kill the Vampire Lestat de Lioncourt (Sam Reid), Louis tells of his adventures in Europe, a quest to discover Old World Vampires and the Theatre Des Vampires in Paris, with Claudia,” reads AMC’s synopsis. “It is in Paris that Louis first meets the Vampire Armand (Assad Zaman). Their courtship and love affair will prove to have devastating consequences both in the past and in the future, and Molloy will probe to get to the truths buried within the memories.”
Rolin Jones created the series, based on Anne Rice’s novels, and serves as executive producer and showrunner. Additional executive producers include Mark Johnson, Mark Taylor, Christopher Rice, and the late Anne Rice.
Season two premieres on May 12, 2024 on AMC and AMC+.
Oscar winner Kevin Costner returns to the director’s chair with Warner Bros Pictures’ Horizon: An American Saga two-part film series. The Western epic just debuted its first trailer and released the first batch of official photos from chapter one of Costner’s Civil War tale.
“In the great tradition of Warner Bros. Pictures’ iconic Westerns, Horizon: An American Saga explores the lure of the Old West and how it was won—and lost—through the blood, sweat and tears of many,” reads Warner Bros Pictures’ synopsis. “Spanning the four years of the Civil War, from 1861 to 1865, Costner’s ambitious cinematic adventure will take audiences on an emotional journey across a country at war with itself, experienced through the lens of families, friends and foes all attempting to discover what it truly means to be the United States of America.”
In addition to Costner, the cast includes Sienna Miller, Sam Worthington, Jena Malone, Owen Crow Shoe, Tatanka Means, Ella Hunt, Tim Guinee, Danny Huston, and Colin Cunningham. Scott Haze, Tom Payne, Abbey Lee, Michael Rooker, Will Patton, Georgia MacPhail, Douglas Smith, Luke Wilson, and Isabelle Fuhrman also star.
The huge ensemble also includes Jamie Campbell Bower, Alejandro Edda, Wasé Winyan Chief, Michael Anganaro, Angus Macfadyen, Jon Beavers, Alex Nibley, Kathleen Quinlan, Etienne Kellici, and Amos Jason Charging Cloud. Plus, Bodhi Okuma Linton, Gregory Cruz, James Russo, Jeff Fahey, David O’Hara, Chris Conner, Leroy M. Silva, Bernardo Velasco, Tom Everett, Glynn Turman, and Giovanni Ribisi are featured in Costner’s latest Western.
Costner co-wrote the screenplay with Jon Baird and serves as a producer along with Howard Kaplan and Mark Gillard. Danny Peykoff, Robert Scannell, Armyan Bernstein, Charlie Lyons, Barry Berg, and Rod Lake executive produce. Costner’s behind the scenes team includes director of photography J. Michael Muro, production designer Derek R. Hill, editor Miklos Wright, and costume designer Lisa Lovaas. Oscar nominee John Debney is in charge of the music.
Kevin Costner in ‘Horizon: An American Saga’ (Photo Credit: Warner Bros Pictures)
“We have a lot of Westerns that aren’t good too because they get simplified [but] this isn’t Disneyland,” stated Costner, speaking with The Hollywood Reporter. “These are real lives. People just making their way, women just trying to keep their families clean and fed … I’m drawn to that. I’m always gonna get to my gunfight, but I’m drawn to the little things that people had to endure. So to me, Horizon was worth holding on to because I just felt like I wanted to tell it. It grew and it grew and it grew until suddenly I realized that I just had to make it, and I had to look to myself financially to do it — which is not the smartest thing. But I count on the movie speaking louder than anything I can say.”
Horizon: An American Saga Chapter 1 will be released in theaters on June 28, 2024. Chapter 2 will follow on August 16, 2024.
Sienna Miller in ‘Horizon: An American Saga’ (Photo Credit: Warner Bros Pictures)Sam Worthington in ‘Horizon: An American Saga’ (Photo Credit: Warner Bros Pictures)A scene from ‘Horizon: An American Saga’ (Photo Credit: Warner Bros Pictures)A scene from ‘Horizon: An American Saga’ (Photo Credit: Warner Bros Pictures)
Sam Retford and Séamus McLean Ross in ‘Outlander: Blood of my Blood’ episode 1 (Photo Credit: Starz)
Starz’s Outlander prequel, Outlander: Blood of My Blood, has added four actors as series regulars. Rory Alexander, Sam Retford, Séamus McLean Ross, and Conor MacNeill are confirmed to play members of Clan Fraser and Clan MacKenzie in the new addition to Starz’s Outlander series franchise.
“We are thrilled to expand our season one cast with some well-known characters from the Outlander universe. We’re so excited to welcome Rory, Sam, Séamus, and Conor to the MacKenzie and Fraser clans and to explore the young journeys of these fan-favorite characters,” stated Matthew B. Roberts, showrunner and executive producer on Outlander: Blood of My Blood.
Clan Fraser has added Rory Alexander (Inland) as a young Murtagh Fitzgibbons Fraser, a role originated by Duncan LaCroix. The headstrong Dougal MacKenzie will be played by Sam Retford (Hoard), taking on the character played by Graham McTavish. Séamus McLean Ross (Rebus) will play Dougal’s shrewd older brother Colum MacKenzie, played in Outlander by Gary Lewis. Conor MacNeill (The Tourist) is onboard to play their faithful advisor and voice of reason, Ned Gowan, previously played by Bill Paterson.
The foursome join previously announced stars Jeremy Irvine as Henry Beauchamp, Hermione Corfield as Julia Moriston, Jamie Roy as Brian Fraser, Harriet Slater as Ellen MacKenzie, and Tony Curran as Lord Lovat.
“Outlander: Blood of My Blood will explore the lives and relationship of Jamie’s parents, Ellen MacKenzie (Slater) and Brian Fraser (Roy) and Claire’s parents, Julia Moriston (Corfield) and Henry Beauchamp (Irvine). The series will center on these two parallel love stories set in two different time periods, with Jamie’s parents in the early 18th century Scottish Highlands and Claire’s parents in WWI England,” reads Starz’s synopsis.
Filming is currently underway on the 10-episode season in Scotland. Additional executive producers include Ronald D. Moore, Maril Davis, Story Mining & Supply Company. Author Diana Gabaldon is involved as a consulting producer.
Outlander will return for the second half of season seven later this year. The 10-episode eighth and final season will start shooting soon in Scotland.
Folsom’s on the hot seat on CBS’s CSI: Vegas season three episode three, “Rat Racked.” Directed by Omar Madha from a script by Marisa Tam, episode three will air on Sunday, March 3, 2024 at 10pm ET/PT.
Season three stars Paula Newsome as Maxine Roby, Marg Helgenberger as Catherine Willows, Matt Lauria as Joshua Folsom, and Mandeep Dhillon as Allie Rajan. Ariana Guerra is Detective Serena Chavez, Lex Medlin plays Beau Finado, and Jay Lee is Chris Park.
“Rat Packed” Plot: The CSI team is called to investigate when the bodies of Frank Sinatra and Joey Bishop impersonators are discovered behind the drywall of a home construction project. Also, Folsom must face the review board about the future of his career.
CSI: Vegas returns for its third season and continues the legacy of the global hit franchise. Amidst the neon lights and long shadows, dark threats lurk in Sin City. Maxine Roby (Newsome) leads her brilliant team of crime scene investigators – Catherine Willows (Helgenberger), Allie Rajan (Dhillon), Detective Serena Chavez (Guerra), Chris Park (Lee) and Beau Finado (Medlin) – as they use science to solve baffling mysteries. Chief among them: who framed their colleague, Joshua Folsom (Lauria), for a gruesome murder?
The most daunting and dangerous cases in the history of this storied franchise are coming, and the team will have to deploy the latest forensic techniques to preserve and serve justice in Sin City.
McCall investigates an unusual death on CBS’s The Equalizer season four episode three. Directed by Geoff Shotz from a script by Adam Glass, episode three – “Blind Justice” – will air on Sunday, March 3, 2024 at 8pm ET/PT.
Queen Latifah returns to star as Robyn McCall in season four of the popular action drama. The cast also includes Tory Kittles as Detective Marcus Dante, Adam Goldberg as Harry Keshegian, Liza Lapira as Melody “Mel” Bayani, and Laya DeLeon Hayes as Delilah. Lorraine Toussaint plays Viola “Vi” Marsette.
“Blind Justice” Plot: After a high-powered real estate developer is killed by a moving subway train, his widow hires McCall to investigate his death. Meanwhile, Aunt Vi and Dee visit an old neighbor living in a nursing home who may need their help.
The Equalizer is a reimagining of the classic series starring Academy Award nominee and multi-hyphenate Queen Latifah as Robyn McCall, an enigmatic woman with a mysterious background who uses her extensive skills as a former CIA operative to help those with nowhere else to turn. McCall presents to most as an average single mom who is quietly raising her teenage daughter. But to a trusted few, she is The Equalizer – an anonymous guardian angel and defender of the downtrodden, who’s also dogged in her pursuit of personal redemption.
Robyn’s clandestine work and her personal life collide when her smart and observant daughter, Delilah, and her aunt Vi, who lives with Robyn to help her balance life as a working mother, discover her secret career as a vigilante. While Robyn contends with uncertainty at home, she is joined in her pursuit of justice by Melody “Mel” Bayani, an edgy bar owner and sniper from Robyn’s past; and Harry Keshegian, a paranoid and brilliant white-hat hacker.
As Robyn aids the oppressed and exploited, she sometimes works with Marcus Dante, an NYPD detective who once sought to uncover her identity, but now respects the need for Robyn’s type of justice even as he often questions her methods.
Colter (Justin Hartley) heads to the sleepy little town of Springland on the way to a job as CBS’s Tracker episode three gets underway. After a brief check-in with Velma (Abby McEnany), Teddi (Robin Weigert), and their adorable Corgi about his next job locating a vintage Shelby Cobra, Colter pops into a restaurant for a quick bite.
There’s a bit of a ruckus in the restaurant when diners spot a woman leaving flyers on the cars in the parking lot. A waitress warns him not to get involved, but of course, Colter doesn’t listen. He steps in as a male diner confronts the woman, and the angry dude decides a verbal warning isn’t enough. He pulls out a knife and slits Colter’s front tire.
The man’s friends arrive to back him up, and he mistakenly believes that Colter will stop interfering. Colter doesn’t and instead attacks the guy with the knife, disarming and then subduing him. Unfortunately, Colter was stabbed in the process.
A doctor caring for his wound notes that he has an interesting collection of scars. While she’s stitching him up, he explains he’s a rewardist. (The doctor thinks that’s a made-up profession and who can blame her?)
The sleepy little town and the woman with the missing person flyer have grabbed his attention, and the doctor says the missing woman, Mia Stine, was a nomad who lived in her van. Her sister, Kira, is the one posting the flyers. The residents don’t appreciate seeing the flyers around town as it scares away tourists.
Kira (Anja Savcic) introduces herself as Colter leaves the doctor’s office, but before they can do anything more than exchange names, the town sheriff interrupts. He had Colter’s tire fixed and is happy to hear Colter doesn’t want to press charges. The sheriff says that Mia’s been missing for three months, and he believes she just moved on. They’re no longer investigating the case.
Colter and Kira chat over coffee in Colter’s RV, and Kira provides more details about her sister. They had a bad childhood, and Mia reacted by becoming a drifter and adrenaline junkie. Kira says that Mia never made it to her next destination, Moab, and she was last seen in Springland. There’s been no activity on her bank account or social media accounts for three months.
The man who attacked Colter is named Tom, and Kira thinks he knows something about Mia. Tom and his buddies work for the Winslows, a wealthy family trying to develop the area into a first-class resort.
Kira asks if he’ll take the job. It’s only a $5000 reward but Colter’s now already invested in seeing this through. He promises to do what he can, but this will be a tough case to solve since it’s been so long since she was last seen.
The odds aren’t in Mia’s favor. She’s most likely dead.
“I’ve made peace with that. If I can’t have Mia back, at least I’ll have the truth,” says Kira.
Colter visits Mia’s last known camping spot and notices a trail cam. He snaps a photo of the IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity) number on the back and calls Bobby (Eric Graise) for help. After filling him in on Mia’s details and sending the photo, Bobby pulls up the flyer and gets her van’s license plate number.
Colter’s forced to abruptly hang up when Tom arrives with a shotgun, threatening to shoot him for trespassing on the Winslow property. Colter explains he’s just looking around for answers and that he’s hoping to collect the $5,000 reward.
Tom says it’s nothing personal with Mia; he dislikes all the van-life people who throw parties on the property and leave their trash behind. It’s his job to get them to leave Winslow land. He’s only angry at Kira because she keeps asking people if he has something to do with Mia’s disappearance. That sort of talk is making it back to his wife and kids, and it’s upsetting them.
Tom drops a huge hint when he reveals that Mia didn’t even sleep in her van half the time. She often wasn’t there when he’d knock and try and get her to move on.
That evening, Colter calls Teddi and Velma for help looking into Mia Stine. They both assumed he stayed in Springland instead of working on the $20000 reward for the missing car, so they’re not surprised when he asks for help on a different case.
Velma quickly finds photos online of a van-life group, and one includes Mia and a guy tagged as Gecko. She’s also able to determine the location of the photo.
The following day, Colter arrives at the location and there’s a group of climbers there ready to ascend. Gecko’s among them, but he’s already at the top of the cliff. He refuses to answer questions about Mia unless Colter climbs up, but then disconnects the rope so he can’t.
Colter returns to town and asks the pretty doctor if she recognizes the guy in Mia’s photo. It turns out Gecko’s real name is Matt Winslow, as in Winslow Resorts. The doctor connects the dots, correctly assuming Colter thinks Matt had something to do with Mia going missing. Apparently, Matt has been in trouble in the past, but the charges all got dropped. No one in town ever goes after the Winslows.
Colter visits the Winslow estate but instead of answering the door, Matt (Richard Harmon) tries to drive away. Colter stands in front of the car and Matt, wisely, stops instead of running him over. Matt claims he knows nothing about Mia but then reluctantly admits they were in a relationship. However, she took off even though they had discussed hitting the road together. She didn’t explain why and just left a note behind before taking off. Basically, Mia ghosted him.
Colter also learns that Mia wasn’t afraid to speak out and had a lot of opinions about this town. Matt loved that about her, but it made her unpopular with other people. He thinks she skipped town because she was tired of getting hassled.
Matt shows Colter her note that reads, “Sorry Matt, decided to go it alone.”
Matt’s mom and dad drive up as Colter’s still speaking with Matt, and they demand to know why he’s asking Matt about Mia. Mr. Winslow advises Colter to speak to the sheriff.
Back at Velma and Teddi’s place, Velma reveals she had her friend Lou from the pet shelter run a background check on Matt Winslow. It turns out Winslow Resorts has been involved in lots of lawsuits, but the complaints aren’t online. They decide now’s the perfect time to get their friend and lawyer Reenie Green involved since she has access to the courts.
Colter shows Kira Mia’s note and Kira determines it’s from her climbing journal. But the writing is not Mia’s. Just then, Bobby calls with news that he found Mia’s van. The IMEI from the game cam is attached to a network of cameras across the Winslows’ properties. The van went to one of the properties around the time of her disappearance but wasn’t ever captured exiting it.
Bobby’s super proud of himself for tapping into the matrix and retrieving the photos. Not everyone can do that.
It’s dark by the time Kira and Colter arrive at the van’s last known location. They walk a few yards and spot Mia’s van, covered with a tarp. They open the back door and Mia’s not inside. However, a gunshot rings out and the windshield cracks, forcing them to duck.
Colter determines the best course of action is to make a run for it. They spot a shed nearby and head there. Another shot rings out and Kira trips, causing Colter to stop and help her up. Colter and Kira make it the short distance from the shed to his truck without being shot at again.
They escape without being followed, and Kira becomes emotional. She never told her sister she loved her, and now, after seeing the van, she’s sure Mia’s dead. Colter understands that kind of regret and says although it doesn’t go away, it’s a reminder of what that person meant to you.
Colter takes the sheriff out to the van, but the van’s already been moved. The sheriff warns Colter that he’s lucky the Winslows didn’t kill him for trespassing. He suggests Colter hit the road right now before he gets into more trouble.
Colter calls Bobby in the middle of the night and asks him to look at the network of game cameras again. He needs to know who moved the van.
Colter returns to his RV and is shocked to see the door slightly open. He draws his gun and Reenie (Fiona Rene) appears in the doorway, reminding him he’s hid his key in the same place for three years. She was close by working on another case, and after a little good-natured flirting, Reenie reveals she quickly dug up two dozen lawsuits initiated by the Winslows. Apparently, the Winslows are lawsuit-happy. However, one lawsuit was brought against them by a landowner named Nathaniel who turned down their offer to buy his property. He believed they burned down his barn and sued them for harassment and property damages.
Three weeks after filing suit, he died. (His cause of death isn’t disclosed.) His lawyer’s witness list in the harassment case included Mia Stine. It’s all circumstantial, and Reenie knows they need to find additional evidence.
Fortunately, Bobby sends a text with exactly what they need to help prove the Winslows are involved.
Colter doesn’t want to wait until the morning to speak with Matt Winslow, and Reenie insists on going with him as his attorney. They find Matt nursing a beer in a bar and tell him they discovered Mia’s van on his family’s property. It’s clear by Matt’s face he had no idea.
Colter suggests that if Matt ever cared about Mia, he needs to tell the truth about her right now. It’s the only way to do right by her memory. Matt confesses he told Mia what his dad was doing – snatching up properties, intimidating landowners – because he wanted to prove he wasn’t like him. Mia asked him to stand up against his family, but he couldn’t.
Matt was present when Nathaniel’s barn was burned down and points the finger at Tony, a driver who works for his parents. He told Mia about it because he loved her, and she told Nathaniel what she learned. She was going to testify and wanted Matt to, also.
Matt still believes Mia bailed on him after being upset he wouldn’t stand up to his parents. He refuses to believe someone else wrote the note, so Colter shows him the video of Tony moving Mia’s van out of the woods.
Matt, Colter, and Reenie drive back to the Winslow house and are met outside by Mr. and Mrs. Winslow and Tony. Colter confronts Tony about Mia’s van and accuses him of being the one who shot at him and Kira. Tony orders them to leave and pulls his gun, but Colter’s able to easily disarm him of his weapon.
Colter and Reenie run through the clues, accusing Mr. Winslow of having Mia killed to stop her from ruining the family’s plans to build a resort. Mr. Winslow seems genuinely confused as to why Mia’s van is on their property and continues to insist they just made her move on.
Colter suddenly realizes Mr. Winslow isn’t lying. It’s been Mrs. Winslow this whole time. She gave the order to have Mia killed to keep Matt from running off with her and to stop her from testifying.
The following day, Colter checks in again with Teddi and Velma as Teddi’s working on a pottery wheel with the Corgi supervising from the comfort of a nearby chair. They wrap up their conversation quickly so that Colter can thank Reenie for her help before she leaves. They found Mia’s body, thanks to Reenie’s help, and now Colter owes her one.
Reenie reveals a guy named Russell called her and Colter says to just block the number. Reenie won’t do that without knowing who Russell is, and Colter confesses Russell’s his brother and they haven’t spoken in 20 years. Russell killed their father and then disappeared.
Before taking off, Colter collects the reward money from Kira and says his goodbyes. He thinks she should fix up Mia’s van, and Kira gives him a hug for all his help.
Greta Lee and Teo Yoo in ‘Past Lives’ (Photo Credit: Jon Pack / Courtesy of A24)
Past Lives took home top film honors at the 2024 Film Independent Spirit Awards, held on February 25th in a tent on the beach in Santa Monica. The film also earned Celine Song the Best Director award, with American Fiction‘s Cord Jefferson and May December‘s Samy Burch earning screenplay honors.
On the television side, The Last of Us collected two awards: Nick Offerman for Best Supporting Performance in a New Scripted Series and Keivonn Montreal Woodard for Best Breakthrough Performance in a New Scripted Series. Beef also netted two wins, with Ali Wong awarded Best Lead Performance in a New Scripted Series and the show earning the Best New Scripted Series award.
2024 FILM INDEPENDENT SPIRIT AWARDS NOMINATIONS
BEST FEATURE (Award given to the producer.)
All of Us Strangers
Producers: Graham Broadbent, Pete Czernin, Sarah Harvey
American Fiction
Producers: Cord Jefferson, Jermaine Johnson, Nikos Karamigios, Ben LeClair
May December
Producers: Jessica Elbaum, Will Ferrell, Grant S. Johnson, Pamela Koffler, Tyler W. Konney, Sophie Mas, Natalie Portman, Christine Vachon
Passages
Producers: Michel Merkt, Saïd Ben Saïd
WINNER: Past Lives
Producers: David Hinojosa, Pamela Koffler, Christine Vachon
We Grown Now
Producers: Minhal Baig, Joe Pirro
BEST FIRST FEATURE (Award given to director and producer)
All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt
Director: Raven Jackson
Producers: Maria Altamirano, Mark Ceryak, Barry Jenkins, Adele Romanski
Chronicles of a Wandering Saint
Director: Tomás Gómez Bustillo
Producers: Gewan Brown, Amanda Freedman
Earth Mama
Director/Producer: Savanah Leaf
Producers: Sam Bisbee, Shirley O’Connor, Medb Riordan, Cody Ryder
WINNER: A Thousand and One
Director: A.V. Rockwell
Producers: Julia Lebedev, Rishi Rajani, Eddie Vaisman, Lena Waithe, Brad Weston
Upon Entry
Directors: Alejandro Rojas, Juan Sebastián Vásquez
Producers: Sergio Adrià, Carlos Juárez, Alba Sotorra, Carles Torras, Xosé Zapata
JOHN CASSAVETES AWARD – Given to the best feature made for under $1,000,000 (Award given to the writer, director and producer)
The Artifice Girl
Director/Writer: Franklin Ritch
Producers: Aaron B. Koontz, Ashleigh Snead
Cadejo Blanco
Director/Writer/Producer: Justin Lerner
Producers: Mauricio Escobar, Ryan Friedkin, Jack Patrick Hurley
WINNER: Fremont
Director/Writer: Babak Jalali
Writer: Carolina Cavalli
Producers: Rachael Fung, Chris Martin, Marjaneh Moghimi, George Rush, Sudnya Shroff, Laura Wagner
Rotting in the Sun
Director/Writer: Sebastián Silva
Writer: Pedro Peirano
Producer: Jacob Wasserman
The Unknown Country
Director/Writer/Producer: Morrisa Maltz
Writer: Lily Gladstone
Writers/Producers: Lainey Bearkiller Shangreaux, Vanara Taing
Producers: Katherine Harper, Laura Heberton, Tommy Heitkamp
BEST DIRECTOR
Andrew Haigh
All of Us Strangers
Todd Haynes
May December
William Oldroyd
Eileen
Ira Sachs
Passages
WINNER: Celine Song
Past Lives
BEST SCREENPLAY
David Hemingson
The Holdovers
WINNER: Cord Jefferson
American Fiction
Laura Moss, Brendan J. O’Brien
Birth/Rebirth
Emma Seligman, Rachel Sennott
Bottoms
Celine Song
Past Lives
BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY
WINNER: Samy Burch; Story by Samy Burch, Alex Mechanik
May December
Noah Galvin, Molly Gordon, Nick Lieberman, Ben Platt
Theater Camp
Tomás Gómez Bustillo
Chronicles of a Wandering Saint
Laurel Parmet
The Starling Girl
Alejandro Rojas, Juan Sebastián Vásquez
Upon Entry
BEST LEAD PERFORMANCE
Jessica Chastain
Memory
Greta Lee
Past Lives
Trace Lysette
Monica
Natalie Portman
May December
Judy Reyes
Birth/Rebirth
Franz Rogowski
Passages
Andrew Scott
All of Us Strangers
Teyana Taylor
A Thousand and One
WINNER: Jeffrey Wright
American Fiction
Teo Yoo
Past Lives
BEST SUPPORTING PERFORMANCE
Erika Alexander
American Fiction
Sterling K. Brown
American Fiction
Noah Galvin
Theater Camp
Anne Hathaway
Eileen
Glenn Howerton
BlackBerry
Marin Ireland
Eileen
Charles Melton
May December
WINNER: Da’Vine Joy Randolph
The Holdovers
Catalina Saavedra
Rotting in the Sun
Ben Whishaw
Passages
BEST BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE
Marshawn Lynch
Bottoms
Atibon Nazaire
Mountains
Tia Nomore
Earth Mama
WINNER: Dominic Sessa
The Holdovers
Anaita Wali Zada
Fremont
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Katelin Arizmendi
Monica
WINNER: Eigil Bryld
The Holdovers
Jomo Fray
All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt
Pablo Lozano
Chronicles of a Wandering Saint
Pat Scola
We Grown Now
BEST EDITING
Santiago Cendejas, Gabriel Díaz, Sofía Subercaseaux
Rotting in the Sun
Stephanie Filo
We Grown Now
WINNER: Daniel Garber
How to Blow Up a Pipeline
Jon Philpot
Theater Camp
Emanuele Tiziani
Upon Entry
ROBERT ALTMAN AWARD – Given to one film’s director, casting director and ensemble cast
Showing Up
Director: Kelly Reichardt
Casting Director: Gayle Keller
Ensemble Cast: André Benjamin, Hong Chau, Judd Hirsch, Heather Lawless, James Le Gros, John Magaro, Matt Malloy, Amanda Plummer, Maryann Plunkett, Denzel Rodriguez, Michelle Williams
BEST DOCUMENTARY (Award given to the director and producer)
Bye Bye Tiberias
Director: Lina Soualem
Producer: Jean-Marie Nizan
WINNER: Four Daughters
Director: Kaouther Ben Hania
Producer: Nadim Cheikhrouha
Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project
Directors/Producers: Joe Brewster, Michèle Stephenson
Producer: Tommy Oliver
Kokomo City
Director: D. Smith
Producers: Bill Butler, Harris Doran
The Mother of All Lies
Director/Producer: Asmae El Moudir
BEST INTERNATIONAL FILM (Award given to the director)
WINNER: Anatomy of a Fall
France
Director: Justine Triet
Godland
Denmark/Iceland
Director: Hlynur Pálmason
Mami Wata
Nigeria
Director: C.J. ‘Fiery’ Obasi
Tótem
Mexico
Director: Lila Avilés
The Zone of Interest
United Kingdom, Poland, USA
Director: Jonathan Glazer
PRODUCERS AWARD presented by Bulleit Frontier Whiskey – The Producers Award, now in its 27th year, honors emerging producers who, despite highly limited resources, demonstrate the creativity, tenacity and vision required to produce quality independent films.
Rachael Fung
Graham Swon
WINNER: Monique Walton
SOMEONE TO WATCH AWARD – The Someone to Watch Award, now in its 30th year, recognizes a talented filmmaker of singular vision who has not yet received appropriate recognition.
Joanna Arnow
The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed
Laura Moss
Birth/Rebirth
WINNER: Monica Sorelle
Mountains
TRUER THAN FICTION AWARD – The Truer Than Fiction Award, now in its 29th year, is presented to an emerging director of non-fiction features who has not yet received significant recognition.
WINNER: Set Hernandez
unseen
Jesse Short Bull, Laura Tomaselli
Lakota Nation vs. United States
Sierra Urich
Joonam
BEST NEW NON-SCRIPTED OR DOCUMENTARY SERIES (Award given to the Creator, Executive Producer, Co-Executive Producer)
Deadlocked: How America Shaped the Supreme Court
Executive Producers: Vinnie Malhotra, Aaron Saidman, Eli Holzman, Dawn Porter
WINNER:Dear Mama
Executive Producers: Lasse Järvi, Quincy ‘QD3’ Jones III, Staci Robinson, Nelson George, Charles D. King, Peter Nelson, Adel ‘Future’ Nur, Jamal Joseph, Ted Skillman, Allen Hughes, Steve Berman, Marc Cimino, Jody Gerson, John Janick, Nicholas Ferrall, Nigel Sinclair
Murder in Big Horn
Executive Producers: Matthew Galkin, Vinnie Malhotra
Co-Executive Producers: Lisa Kalikow, Joshua Levine
Stolen Youth: Inside the Cult at Sarah Lawrence
Executive Producers: Mindy Goldberg, Dan Cogan, Liz Garbus, Jon Bardin, Zach Heinzerling, Krista Parris, Daniel Barban Levin, Felicia Rosario
Co-Executive Producer: Julie Gaither
Wrestlers
Executive Producers: Greg Whiteley, Ryan O’Dowd
Co-Executive Producers: Alejandro Melendez, Adam Leibowitz
BEST NEW SCRIPTED SERIES (Award given to the Creator, Executive Producer, Co-Executive Producer)
WINNER: Beef
Creator/Executive Producer: Lee Sung Jin
Executive Producers: Steven Yeun, Ali Wong, Jake Schreier, Ravi Nandan, Alli Reich
Co-Executive Producers: Alice Ju, Carrie Kemper
Dreaming Whilst Black
Creator/Executive Producer: Adjani Salmon
Creators: Maximilian Evans, Natasha Jatania, Laura Seixas
Executive Producers: Tanya Qureshi, Dhanny Joshi, Bal Samra, Thomas Stogdon
I’m a Virgo
Creator/Executive Producer: Boots Riley
Executive Producers: Tze Chun, Michael Ellenberg, Lindsey Springer, Jharrel Jerome, Rebecca Rivo
Co-Executive Producers: Marcus Gardley, Carver Karaszewski
Jury Duty
Creators/Executive Producers: Lee Eisenberg, Gene Stupnitsky
Executive Producers: David Bernad, Ruben Fleischer, Nicholas Hatton, Cody Heller, Todd Schulman, Jake Szymanski, Andrew Weinberg
Slip
Creator/Executive Producer: Zoe Lister-Jones
Executive Producers: Ro Donnelly, Dakota Johnson, Katie O’Connell Marsh, David Fortier, Ivan Schneeberg
BEST LEAD PERFORMANCE IN A NEW SCRIPTED SERIES
Emma Corrin
A Murder at the End of the World
Dominique Fishback
Swarm
Betty Gilpin
Mrs. Davis
Jharrel Jerome
I’m a Virgo
Zoe Lister-Jones
Slip
Bel Powley
A Small Light
Bella Ramsey
The Last of Us
Ramón Rodríguez
Will Trent
WINNER: Ali Wong
Beef
Steven Yeun
Beef
BEST SUPPORTING PERFORMANCE IN A NEW SCRIPTED SERIES
Murray Bartlett
The Last of Us
Billie Eilish
Swarm
Jack Farthing
Rain Dogs
WINNER: Nick Offerman
The Last of Us
Adina Porter
The Changeling
Lewis Pullman
Lessons in Chemistry
Benny Safdie
The Curse
Luke Tennie
Shrinking
Olivia Washington
I’m a Virgo
Jessica Williams
Shrinking
BEST BREAKTHROUGH PERFORMANCE IN A NEW SCRIPTED SERIES
Clark Backo
The Changeling
Aria Mia Loberti
All the Light We Cannot See
Adjani Salmon
Dreaming Whilst Black
WINNER: Keivonn Montreal Woodard
The Last of Us
Kara Young
I’m a Virgo
BEST ENSEMBLE CAST IN A NEW SCRIPTED SERIES
Jury Duty
Ensemble Cast: Alan Barinholtz, Susan Berger, Cassandra Blair, David Brown, Kirk Fox, Ross Kimball, Pramode Kumar, Trisha LaFache, Mekki Leeper, James Marsden, Edy Modica, Kerry O’Neill, Rashida Olayiwola, Whitney Rice, Maria Russell, Ishmel Sahid, Ben Seaward, Ron Song, Evan Williams