Live Bait is a Canadian comedy-drama film, released in 1995. The directorial debut of Bruce Sweeney, the film won the award for Best Canadian Feature Film at the 1995 Toronto International Film Festival.
The film stars Tom Scholte as Trevor McIntosh, a 23-year-old man attempting to lose his virginity during the summer after his college graduation, while the relationship of his parents (Babz Chula and Kevin McNulty) is simultaneously faltering.
The film was written as Sweeney's graduate thesis for his MFA in Film Studies at the University of British Columbia.
Live Bait may refer to:
"Live Bait" (previously titled "Rise") is the sixth episode of the fourth season of the post-apocalyptic horror television series The Walking Dead, which aired on AMC on November 17, 2013. The episode was written by Nichole Beattie and directed by Michael Uppendahl. The episode centers on The Governor (David Morrissey), who has isolated himself from society after killing his entire army. He has become an aimless wanderer until he meets a small family of survivors.
"Live Bait" marks the first appearance of Alanna Masterson as Tara Chambler.
In a flashback, The Governor (David Morrissey) becomes indifferent following his massacre of the Woodbury army, and he is abandoned by his henchmen Caesar Martinez (Jose Pablo Cantillo) and Shumpert (Travis Love) while he is asleep. He returns to Woodbury, only to find it abandoned and overrun by walkers; he burns down the entire town.
A few months later, the bearded and weakened Governor has become an aimless wanderer. He sees a young girl, who resembles his deceased daughter Penny, in the window of a nearby apartment building. Inside the building, he meets the Chambler family residing there: Lilly (Audrey Marie Anderson) and Tara (Alanna Masterson), the sisters' father David (Danny Vinson), and Lilly's daughter Meghan (Meyrick Murphy), the girl the Governor had seen earlier. The family has sufficient food and arms, and they are waiting for the National Guard. After explaining that he would only stay for the night, he fabricates a false story involving the fall of Woodbury and a new identity, "Brian Heriot," a name he saw painted on a barn. David then requests that The Governor retrieve a backgammon set from a neighbor, which The Governor does.
The television series Mission: Impossible was created by Bruce Geller. The original series premiered on the CBS network in September 1966 and consisted of 171 one-hour episodes running over seven seasons before ending in March 1973. A remake of the series premiered on the ABC network in October 1988 and consisted of 35 episodes running over two abbreviated seasons before ending in February 1990. This article lists episodes from both series, including both broadcast order and production order, which often differed considerably.