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1 Cast. 2 References. 3 External links. Toggle the table of contents. Go Home (film) ... Go Home is a 2015 international co-production film directed by Jihane Chouaib ...
I Used to Go Here is a 2020 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Kris Rey. It stars Gillian Jacobs, Josh Wiggins, Hannah Marks, Forrest Goodluck, Jorma Taccone, Kate Micucci, Zoë Chao and Jemaine Clement. It stars Jacobs as novelist Kate Conklin who returns to her alma mater 15 years after graduating.
Home Movies is an American [1] [2] animated sitcom created by Brendon Small and Loren Bouchard. [3] The show centers on an eight-year-old aspiring filmmaker, also named Brendon Small, who makes homemade film productions in his spare time with his friends Melissa Robbins and Jason Penopolis. He lives with his divorced mother Paula and his ...
The film features actors from Singapore, South Korea, China, the United States and the United Kingdom. It began filming in December 2021. [1]Conceived without a script, the film is mainly driven by character improvisations through weeks of rehearsals and a basic premise.
Harry Graham is a lonely and beaten-down man who has recently been released from prison after serving time for murdering his wife 13 years earlier. His son, Jimmy ( Vincent ), who witnessed the slaying as a child, is still haunted by the crime and wants to confront his father about it.
[1] [2] The film received favorable reviews at Montreal’s 2008 Fantasia Film Festival. [1] Following the final screening, bids were made on the film and IFC Entertainment acquired the U.S. rights for IFC's Festival Direct Video On Demand and DVD rights Nationwide. [1] The film stars Adrian Pasdar, Cady McClain, Amber Joy Williams, and Austin ...
Twentieth Century-Fox changed the title in April 1950 from The Man on the Ledge to Fourteen Hours following a request from Warde's mother, who wished to distance the film from her son's story. Studio chief Darryl F. Zanuck considered changing the film's setting to another city for the same reason, but it was ultimately filmed in New York.
Lunch Hour is a 1962 British romantic comedy drama film directed by James Hill and starring Shirley Anne Field, Robert Stephens and Kay Walsh. [2] Written by John Mortimer based on his 1960 one-act play of the same name, it is about a man and a woman who attempt to conduct their affair during their lunch hour, but are continually interrupted.