Lost Star Somerhalder Aboard The Breed
Source: Moviehole
April 12, 2005
Moviehole reported yesterday that Ian Somerhalder, who played Boone on ABC's hit show Lost, will next star in Nick Mastandrea's horror film The Breed, coming to theaters in 2006.
Somerhalder will have a lead role in the Wes Craven-produced film, which starts shooting in South Africa later this week. He'll play one of two distinctly different brothers who wind up on a deserted island only to do battle with evil, but strangely-smart dogs.
Director Mastandrea was Craven's first assistant director on Cursed, Wes Craven's New Nightmare and the "Scream" series.
Columnists Marilyn Beck and Stacey Jenel Smith confirmed the above by talking to Somerhalder about the role. "It's a spooky movie. And I'm going to be out of the country for a long time," the actor said.
Somerhalder also recently signed a holding deal with Touchstone/ABC for a series of his own. All he knows about the latter is he wants it to be "absolutely" different from Lost. He notes, "You can't top the show. The best you can do is hope to parallel it."
Source: Moviehole
April 12, 2005
Moviehole reported yesterday that Ian Somerhalder, who played Boone on ABC's hit show Lost, will next star in Nick Mastandrea's horror film The Breed, coming to theaters in 2006.
Somerhalder will have a lead role in the Wes Craven-produced film, which starts shooting in South Africa later this week. He'll play one of two distinctly different brothers who wind up on a deserted island only to do battle with evil, but strangely-smart dogs.
Director Mastandrea was Craven's first assistant director on Cursed, Wes Craven's New Nightmare and the "Scream" series.
Columnists Marilyn Beck and Stacey Jenel Smith confirmed the above by talking to Somerhalder about the role. "It's a spooky movie. And I'm going to be out of the country for a long time," the actor said.
Somerhalder also recently signed a holding deal with Touchstone/ABC for a series of his own. All he knows about the latter is he wants it to be "absolutely" different from Lost. He notes, "You can't top the show. The best you can do is hope to parallel it."