Woody Harrelson, Simu Liu, and Finn Cole break down the intense, dangerous days on the Last Breath set and discuss their great onscreen chemistry.
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.
Probably not, but that's what saturation divers -- who live in pressurized chambers for weeks while working deep below the ocean surface -- do every time they take an assignment, as deftly depicted in Last Breath,
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.
NBC's The Kelly Clarkson Show had a surprise host as Simu Liu stepped in last minute to replace Kelly Clarkson, unaware until moments before.
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.
The actor and his co-stars tell Newsweek about the challenges of playing real-life commercial divers on a high stakes mission.
The new thriller, which is directed by Alex Parkinson, is one of the most claustrophobic experiences you'll have watching a movie. Based on a 2019 documentary of the same name, Last Breath depicts a deep-sea diving mission that goes wrong.
Alex Parkinson's film is about a saturation diving accident that took place in 2012. In its journalistic way the film takes you down and lifts you up.
A routine deep-sea diving mission in the North Sea goes terribly wrong when a young diver is stranded some 300 feet below the surface in the new film “Last Breath.”
A 2019 documentary, by the same director, also told the story of a pipe-repairing diver who found himself stranded after a storm severed his mechanical lifeline.