Apartment 7A - Premiering on Paramount+ September 2024

Apartment 7A, a psychological thriller starring Julia Garner (Ozark) and directed by Natalie Erika James (Relic), will premiere this fall exclusively on Paramount+ in the U.S. and in select international markets.

When a struggling young dancer (Garner) suffers a devastating injury, she finds herself drawn in by dark forces when a peculiar, well-connected older couple promises her a shot at fame. Set in 1965 New York City, the film tells the story prior to Roman Polanski’s horror classic Rosemary’s Baby, exploring what happened in the apartment before Rosemary moved in. 

Apartment 7A also stars Dianne Wiest (Mayor of Kingstown), Jim Sturgess (Across the Universe) and Kevin McNally (Pirates of the Caribbean). Additional cast includes Marli Siu (Everything I Know About Love), Andrew Buchan (All the Money in the World), Rosy McEwen (Blue Jean) and Kobna Holdbrook-Smith (Wonka). 

Producers are John Krasinski, Allyson Seeger, Michael Bay, Andrew Form and Brad Fuller. Vicki Dee Rock and Alexa Ginsburg are executive producers.

Shot in London and New York.

“The production design and Diane Weist were the best parts of the movie.” - FromTheFourthRow.com

“Production designer Simon Bowles (A Quiet Place: Day One), should get props for giving the movie a 1960's aesthetic.  The look and feel of the apartments, New York City, etc. transports the viewer back to a time when things were simpler, yet not really.” - Flick Direct

“Apartment 7A is an incredibly slick production. The production design by Simon Bowles brings to life the 1965 of Rosemary’s Baby without skipping a beat. The Bramford with its never-ending uncanny spaces make it seem like it has spread poisonous roots throughout Manhattan.” - InSessionFilm.com

“With Bowles’ magnificent set design as the backdrop, it truly makes the film a feast for the eyes.” - Movie Jawn

“This has big sets and surprise moments. It culminates into one of the best scares in the entire film, which keeps up the wicked production design but with, naturally, a bit of a satanic influence.” - Comicbook.com

“I loved the way the production design during the dream sequence turns the apartment building into something from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.” - Larsen On Film

“Terry is a performer at her core, and this shows in how James, production designer Simon Bowles, and cinematographer Arnau Valls Colomer work together to bring these scenes to life.” - CreepyKingdom.com

“Production designer Simon Bowles has masterfully evoked the mid-1960s era, from the Renaissance Revival of the Bramford apartment building in all its chilly grandeur to the sense that all these privileged people have simply slapped a nice coat of paint on an evil rat’s nest.” - Midwest Journal