Buried on Sunday is a Canadian comedy film, released in 1992. Also known as "Northern Extremes", it was directed by Paul Donovan, and written by Donovan and Bill Fleming.[1]

Buried on Sunday
DVD cover
Directed byPaul Donovan
Written byPaul Donovan
William Fleming
Produced bySuzanne Colvin
William Fleming
StarringPaul Gross
Denise Virieux
Henry Czerny
CinematographyLes Krizsan
Edited byStephan Fanfara
Music byMarty Simon
Production
company
Distributed byAlliance Communications
Release date
1992
Running time
94 min.
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

The film stars Paul Gross as Augustus Knickel, the mayor of Solomon Gundy, a fictional island off the coast of Nova Scotia; the island name and film title are taken from a nursery rhyme.

The community is in an economic crisis due to the cod fishing moratorium, but finds its fortunes transformed when an AWOL Russian nuclear submarine surfaces at the island. With only four remaining crewmen, including the former missile programming officer-turned-prisoner (Tommy Sexton) on board, Knickel buys the submarine, discovers a cache of tactical missiles, and subsequently declares the island an independent nuclear power.

The film's cast also includes Mary Walsh, Maury Chaykin, Henry Czerny, Michael Gencher, Andy Jones, Louis Del Grande, and John Dunsworth. It also includes a cameo appearance by Harvey Kirck as a newscaster.

It was nominated for the 1992 Genie award for Best Original Screenplay.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ IMDB.com. "Buried On Sunday: Filming Details". IMDb. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  2. ^ 1992 Genie award nomination for Best original screenplay. New York Times: "Movies". Retrieved 03 August 2014.

External links edit