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| A wife and mother (Kim Raver) is forced to bury her husband and then try to uncover the details of his death in Lifetime's "Bond of Silence." | 
Quest for justice: Lifetime movie pits star Raver against 'Bond of Silence'
It's the essence of what is known as "a Lifetime  movie": a woman facing incredible odds to ensure justice is done. That  framework has serviced numerous dramas and actresses, and it does so  again as Lifetime debuts the fact-based film "Bond of Silence" Monday,  Aug. 23. 
The name of the real person played by Kim Raver is Katy  Hutchison, but her movie alter ego is Katy McIntosh, suddenly widowed  one New Year's Eve when her attorney husband (David Cubitt) is killed  while dealing with a nearby teen party that has gotten out of hand. As  she tries to determine the exact circumstances that led to her spouse's  death, Katy is stonewalled not only by the youths who are unified in  their silence but by their very protective parents. Charlie McDermott  plays a teenager who has a direct role in the tragedy, and Greg Grunberg  portrays a police detective trying to help the driven Katy get to the  truth. Jacob Hoppenbrouwer and Ruby Curtis play the McIntoshes' young  twins. 
Raver appreciated Hutchison's visit while "Bond of  Silence" was in production, but for creative reasons, she's also glad  that presence wasn't constant.
"Katy helped us to a point, so that we could really tell  the story," Raver says. "She was very available to me when I needed it,  but when you're dealing with someone's life, you also want to pick the  moments where (such firsthand contact) is appropriate.
"I thought it would be easier to have the real person  there, but it actually posed some challenging things that we had to sort  of work through. What may have happened at times in her real life may  not have been the best way to tell the story. The experience she went  through happened over several years, and we found that was going to be  difficult to do dramatically, so we had to condense the time."
Grunberg also had a considerable task in melding the  traits of several investigators into a composite character for the  movie's purposes. "He's an amalgamation of five detectives who worked on  the case," the amiable actor explains, "but a lot of the investigating  was done by this very persistent woman who lost her husband and refused  to live by this unethical social rule that was set up. In the movie,  she's constantly on my character not to settle and to find the answers."
While they had no intention of diminishing the story  they were telling, Raver and Grunberg found the need to let off some  steam on the "Bond of Silence" set in British Columbia, where the real  Katy lives. 
"We were able to have a ton of laughs off-camera," Raver  reports, "then really dive into some heavy-duty territory when the  cameras rolled. Greg was a great partner to be able to have some laughs  with ... and thank goodness, because there weren't a lot of laughs in  the script."
Indeed, Grunberg says, "We were shooting in an area  where everybody who lives there knows about this story. It was very big  news there. There are so many questions I have about it myself, it was  really interesting to play a detective in this and kind of keep those  questions alive.
"Luckily, Kim takes the same approach that I do, which  is to do my homework to a fault," says Grunberg, a former "Heroes" star  who will tackle series work again in NBC's "Love Bites" at midseason. 
Directed by television veteran Peter Werner, who has  handled such other Lifetime films as "Gracie's Choice" and "Girl,  Positive," "Bond of Silence" keeps Raver front and center. She likes  having a project rest largely on her shoulders after being part of so  many ensemble casts, including "24" and "Grey's Anatomy."
"I would love to start producing eventually as well,"  she says, "because I love the process from start to finish: finding a  piece, building it, casting it and putting all the pieces of the puzzle  together. I do enjoy that pressure - maybe it comes from being from New  York! - but you know you're never doing it alone.
"I've had some really fine examples of people who do  that extremely well. For instance, I learned so much from Kiefer  Sutherland (Raver's leading man on '24'). He set the bar so high,  everyone would want to rise to that level. He was extremely  professional, talented, intelligent and caring. Watching someone like  that is very inspirational." 
While Katy Hutchison is a real person, she's also the  latest addition to Raver's stable of strong female characters also  encompassing such other shows as "Third Watch" and "Lipstick Jungle." 
"I think television, especially now, is such a fantastic  medium for actors in general," the actress reflects, "and particularly  for strong women. What I love about these characters is that they've all  been somewhat flawed and multidimensional."
Source: dailyherald.com 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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