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Butterfly on a Wheel (US: Shattered, Europe: Desperate Hours) is a 2007 thriller film [3] directed by Mike Barker, co-produced and written by William Morrissey.A British-Canadian joint production, it stars Pierce Brosnan, Gerard Butler, and Maria Bello.
Five-year-old Shirley Blake (Shirley Temple) and her widowed mother Mary (Lois Wilson), a maid, live in the home of her employers, the wealthy and mean-spirited Smythe family: Anita (Dorothy Christy), J. Wellington (Theodore von Eltz), their spoiled seven-year-old daughter Joy (Jane Withers), and cantankerous wheelchair-using Uncle Ned (Charles Sellon).
A Family Man (previous title The Headhunter's Calling) is a 2016 American drama film directed by Mark Williams, in his directorial debut, and written by Bill Dubuque.The film tells the story of Dane Jensen, a Corporate Recruiter from Chicago, who must balance his career aspirations and his increasingly complex family life.
Butler is known for playing characters who are killed off in many of the horror films that he has appeared in. He has starred in Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood as Michael, Night of the Living Dead as Tom, Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III as Ryan, and as Ben in two episodes of the television show Freddy's Nightmares.
Purgatory is a drama by the Irish writer William Butler Yeats. It was first presented in at the Abbey Theatre , Dublin , on 19 August 1938, a few months before Yeats' death. Story
Gerard Butler is a cocky, hot-tempered businessman married to a loving wife (Maria Bello), but when their daughter is held hostage by a psychopath (Pierce Brosnan), everything cozy and respectable ...
The Butler (full title Lee Daniels' The Butler) [4] [5] is a 2013 American historical drama film directed and co-produced by Lee Daniels and written by Danny Strong. [6] It is inspired by Wil Haygood 's Washington Post article "A Butler Well Served by This Election".
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Bosley Crowther wrote: "Despite the obviousness of the humor and the conventionality of the small-town tone—achieved and directed by David Butler as though he were reading from a prop department catalogue—the singing of several old songs hits by Miss Day and Mr. MacRae is agreeably melodious.