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Missing (stylized as missing.) is a 1982 American biographical thriller drama film directed by Costa-Gavras from a screenplay written by Gavras and Donald E. Stewart, adapted from the book The Execution of Charles Horman: An American Sacrifice (1978) by Thomas Hauser (later republished under the title Missing in 1982), based on the disappearance of American journalist Charles Horman, in the ...
Chan Is Missing is a 1982 American independent comedy-drama film directed, co-written, produced and edited by Wayne Wang. It is his solo directorial debut. It is his solo directorial debut. The film, which is shot in black-and-white , is plotted as a mystery with noir undertones, and its title is a play on the Charlie Chan film series, which ...
Missing, an American silent drama directed by James Young Missing (1982 film) , an American historical drama directed by Costa-Gavras Missing (2007 film) [ nl ] , a Belgian film that was a 2007 box office number-one film in Belgium
Megan Is Missing; Midnight Ballad for Ghost Theater; Minus 31: The Nagpur Files; Misery (film) Missing (2023 film) Missing (1982 film) Missing in Brooks County; The Missing People; The Missing Person; Miss Osaka; Misteri Dilaila; Mon Jaane Na; Morning Patrol; The Mothership; Murder 3; The Murder of Dr. Harrigan; My Son (2021 Christian Carion film)
The movie traces how his family and a private investigator work to find out what had happened. The film focuses on how little help the various police forces were and is an indictment of the apathy and bureaucracy of the legal system on both sides of the border.
The original negative is thought to be lost and the original Korean-language version only exists in a 48-minute fragment. However, MGM owns a complete 35mm interpositive and textless 35mm elements for the opening and ending titles and was able to reconstruct the AIP-TV English-dubbed U.S. version in CinemaScope. 1968: Easy Rider: Dennis Hopper
Later, Toho made even more cuts for future re-releases, and the removed footage then went lost. During the 1980s, numerous efforts were made to find the missing scenes, but nothing turned up until the 1990s and 2000s, when all these scenes were found. After recovery, Toho re-released the film once more, with all the missing footage restored. 1982
The first ever Filipino talkie film and an early example of horror genre movies based on Philippine mythology, featuring a creature called Aswang or a Ghoul. The film opened to acclaim at the Lyric on January 1, 1933, then at the Tivoli on January 4. Unfortunately, according to some observers, the sound was sometimes out of sync and inaudible. [82]