Keram Malicki-Sanchez (Ink)

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nomad662

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So many interesting and talented people worked on Punisher War Zone. Keram is just one of them, but a very interesting and talented one! In case you all don't have access to his bio on IMDb, here it is:

Keram's professional acting debut was in the role of Oliver! in Toronto for which he received widespread acclaim and went on to do roles in Mame and Evita for the same theater.

By the age of ten Keram was busy recording radio dramas for the CBC and launched his music career, singing on various records and even recording a full length album at fourteen in South America which was signed to a major label there and had two songs charting on the radio.

At fourteen Keram was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award (Canada's Tony) for his performance in an adaptation of Mark Twain's 'The Prince and the Pauper'. At fifteen, he met Keith White on a sitcom pilot, 'Cutting Loose' and the two formed the band Blue Dog Pict for which Keram was the frontman for seven years. The band released three albums and toured across North America, charting in the top ten on several dozen College radio stations.

At seventeen Keram scored a lead role on the Franklin Waterman produced series Catwalk with co-stars Paul Popowich and Neve Campbell. He also founded Constant Change, an independent record label and production company which produced two videos for the band, one of which received the largest request in MuchMusic history.

Keram played the title role of Chris Black in Skin Deep which won the People's Choice award at the Berlin film festival and was also an official selection at the Toronto Film Festival a year later. Keram went on to play roles in such films as American History X, Happy Campers and John Q.

Known not only as an actor, but as what Lenny Stoute of the Toronto Star calls 'a one man cultural blitzkrieg' Keram's interest in acting, performing music, film scoring, record producing, writing, multimedia design and production and film making continues to provoke his audience, fans 'devout to the point of being cultish' and raise questions.

On top of that he's utterly adorable and a lovely person to chat with. Yeah, I'm a FEMALE.
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Check out http://keramsongs.com/ and http://www.keramcast.com/
 
such an utterly misrepresented and under used character. Tsk, tsk.
 
Ink and Pittsy in the movie were very different from Ink and Pittsy in the comics. The comics versions were pretty interesting. The ones in the movie were entertaining.
 
Not really, outside of Pittsy always telling Ink to shut the **** up, that was about it. Outside of that here deaths were the only interesting things about them.
 
"keep your nose clean."

She ripped that from somewhere I can't figure it out. The real Ink was a 30's something IT looking guy who wasn't a *****. He had an Harold Ramis ish expression.
 
Has anyone involved in the film come out to comment on the box office failure yet? I kinda want to hear what their opinions are. Or maybe LGF is trying to keep them quiet. Or they personally rather not talk about it.
 
Has anyone involved in the film come out to comment on the box office failure yet? I kinda want to hear what their opinions are. Or maybe LGF is trying to keep them quiet. Or they personally rather not talk about it.
Nobody hasn't said anything yet.
 
Has anyone involved in the film come out to comment on the box office failure yet? I kinda want to hear what their opinions are. Or maybe LGF is trying to keep them quiet. Or they personally rather not talk about it.

You really think anyone has to talk about why it flopped? A lot of negative reviews (and some positives) have a laundry list of why this film was DOA.
 
You really think anyone has to talk about why it flopped? A lot of negative reviews (and some positives) have a laundry list of why this film was DOA.

Not ask why, ask what their reaction was to it.
 
I'll be honest, the first time I seen Ink on screen I thought it was Cate Blanchett for a second.
 
Ink's a pretty interesting character especially from ' In The Beginning '
my favorite kill in the movie. smacks his head into the wall, and punches his face in. :unishr:

I thought they should have went into a little more detail with his character. but nonetheless, my favorite movie. Keram was the best guy for the role.

-WaRzOnE
 
The guy from the movie the Warriors who was the leader of the orphans reminded me of Ink when I first read In the beggining.
 

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