The financial precarity the film explores continues to be true for tens of thousands of unhoused and low-income Seattleites.
SAN ANTONIO - We're learning more about a hit-and-run on the Southwest side that left a young tow-truck driver in critical condition.Brandy Salinas' son has spe ...
"Tow" is a minor indie comedy that doesn’t always make the right moves, but Byrne seizes her character and turns the question ...
It’s cute, funny and has a bunch of sea critters to keep young and old amused. Yet the biggest ace up its sleeve is having Nick Offerman voicing sour-faced recluse Mr. Fish. His priceless deadpan ...
Based on a real Seattle story, “Tow” is interested in what justice looks like for someone who “fell into bad luck and didn’t have a safety net.” ...
Tow trucks are there to alert other drivers that something is happening, usually when a tow truck is stopped on the side of the road or working a scene.
Fresh off her first Oscar nomination for “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” Rose Byrne trades living in a motel while a hole in ...
She’s fighting this legal battle against the tow truck company, setting up a simple David-and-Goliath dynamic that’s highly ...
Riding recent awards acclaim, Rose Byrne plays an unhoused woman who fights back when the car she lives in is taken.
Stephanie Laing and Rose Byrne's Tow certainly wins points for its charm and heartwarming tale of perseverance, but its story proves too basic.
A prolonged legal fight by Seattle University alum Kevin Eggers to help a homeless client reclaim her car—and her life—becomes the inspiration for Tow, a new film starring Rose Byrne.
Well known heavy tow truck driver Reece Skews, 40, will no longer be able to do the job he loves, after a recent incident ...