Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
S. Salmon Fishing in the Yemen; Saraband for Dead Lovers; Scenes from a Marriage; Scirocco (film) Scorpio Nights; Second Skin (1999 film) A Serious Game; Serve the People (film)
The play of lust, romance, degradation, and guilt on her face is the movie's real story." [ 22 ] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, "Instead of pumping up the plot with recycled manufactured thrills, it's content to contemplate two reasonably sane adults who get themselves into an almost insoluble dilemma."
C. The Canterbury Tales (film) Caroline at Midnight; Casablanca, Casablanca; The Chain (2014 film) Challengers (film) Cheatin' (film) Christmas Full of Grace
Theodore "Ted" Crawford, a wealthy Irish aeronautical engineer living in Los Angeles, confirms that his wife, Jennifer, is having an affair with police detective Robert Nunally. Confronting his wife, Crawford shoots her. Police are called, including Nunally, who enters the house cautiously, negotiating with Crawford for both to put down their guns.
The Wife is a 2017 drama film directed by Björn L. Runge and written by Jane Anderson, based on the 2003 novel of the same name by Meg Wolitzer.It stars Glenn Close, Jonathan Pryce, and Christian Slater, and follows a woman (Close) who questions her life choices as she travels to Stockholm with her husband (Pryce), [4] who is set to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature.
During a hot day in New Orleans, after his work at a hardware store, Samuel returns home with a box of chocolates and a bouquet of flowers for his wife Ashley for their wedding anniversary. However, he finds her cheating on him with Damien. He holds them captive at gunpoint, while he decides their fate.
A husband and wife who both worked on-air at KARK-TV in Little Rock, Ark., were fired this week, along with two other station employees, after two videos they made and posted on YouTube became the ...
Last Night was released on home video and streaming services on August 1, 2011; [3] it was made available on iTunes and Netflix. [5] The film was later packaged as part of the Echo Bridge Home Entertainment release Epic Romances with Anna Karenina (1948), As You Like It (1936), The Magic Sword (1962), and The Strange Love of Martha Ivers (1946).