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Dangerous Crosswinds,
a feature-length drama from Back Lot Films, Inc., is the story of a
Pulitzer prize-winning reporter who hits a career roadblock and returns to
New Hampshire, where he was raised, to regroup. Once back, he unexpectedly
finds himself at the center of a story unlike any he’s covered before—one
involving his own role in the mercy-killing of a close friend.
The script of Dangerous Crosswinds,
written by director Bill Millios, centers on Harry Toland, a New Hampshire
native and UNH graduate who has built a highly successful career at a New
York City daily paper. As the
film opens, Harry
has just been fired over a controversial book he wrote supporting a
person’s right to die. The uproar has proven too much for the paper, which
has let him go.
Harry, recently divorced, opts to return
to New Hampshire’s Seacoast Region, where he grew up, to reassess his
life’s direction. He takes a job with a local paper, The Hampton Eagle,
which is edited by an old college buddy. As Harry reconnects with other
figures from his past, he learns the wife of one of his former UNH mentors
is afflicted with an advanced case of Alzheimer’s disease.
Though a firm advocate of a person’s right
to die, Harry later begins to question the circumstances of the situation.
His search for answers leads him on a mini-odyssey of encounters with a
wide range of local people from vastly different backgrounds, each of whom
knows a piece of the real story. As the clues add up, Harry is forced to
confront a reality that he could never have imagined—one complicated by
his own role in the death of a cherished friend under circumstances that
are much different than what he first believed.

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