Finn Cole shares a message to Us Weekly exclusively for his former ‘Peaky Blinders’ costars as they wrap up production on the upcoming film
Finn Cole shares his interpretation of Last Breath's final moments on the red carpet, writer Mitchell LaFortune praises Woody Harrelson's stunts, and director Alex Parkinson & composer Paul Leonard-Morgan reveal how long they'd last underwater.
The actor does a deep dive on his new feature with Simu Liu and Woody Harrelson, before looking back on his Cillian Murphy crime drama.
Imagine being trapped hundreds of feet below the ocean surface. 'Last Breath' is a nail-biting film based on the true story of the rescue of a diver.
Focus Features Finn Cole knows the power of love firsthand — even when it’s tested by extreme circumstances. “We’ve all, if we’re lucky enough, to have loved in our life,” Cole, 28, exclusively shared with Us Weekly at the film’s New York premiere on Tuesday,
“Last Breath” continues an ongoing trend of fictionalized remakes of the events covered in a prior documentary. This movie uses the 2019 documentary of the same name as its basis. Both films were directed by Alex Parkinson, who uses real-life footage of the people involved during the closing credits of this fictionalized version.
Liu had a different perspective on the subject. He found more similarities in the “lifestyle” of acting, like having to leave home for several months to shoot a project. The deep-sea divers in Last Breath were going on a 28-day expedition; it can be even longer for actors on movie sets.
At the New York premiere of "Last Breath," Finn Cole discussed the terrifying real-life events that inspired the film.
A true-story adventure to make you gasp, Last Breath recounts a tale of survival set in one of the most dangerous environments known to humankind, one that is every bit as inhospitable and perilous as those more obviously cinematic realms of outer space or the peaks of the Himalayas — 300 feet below the surface of the North Sea.
They had an oxygen bar stationed in the lobby at the press screening for the underwater survival thriller “Last Breath,” and I have a couple of thoughts about that: A., I’m glad there wasn’t a similar promotional gimmick tied to the screening of “The Substance” last year.