Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Netflix period drama starring Florence Pugh uses a fourth-wall breaking framing device for an important reason. Here's how director Sebastián Lelio explains the film's ending.
Florence Pugh's Netflix film "The Wonder" investigates the mystery of a young religious girl who survives without food. Here's the movie ending, explained.
The Wonder is a 2022 period psychological drama film directed by Sebastián Lelio. Emma Donoghue , Lelio, and Alice Birch wrote the screenplay based on the 2016 novel of the same name by Donoghue. Set shortly after the Great Famine , it follows an English nurse sent to a rural Irish village to observe a young ' fasting girl ', who is seemingly ...
To the Wonder is a 2012 American experimental romantic drama film written and directed by Terrence Malick and starring Ben Affleck, Olga Kurylenko, Rachel McAdams, and Javier Bardem. Filmed in Oklahoma and Paris , the film chronicles a couple who, after falling in love in Paris, struggle to keep their relationship from falling apart after ...
The Wonder is a 2016 novel by Irish-Canadian novelist Emma Donoghue. Set in post-famine Ireland, the novel follows English nurse Elizabeth Wright as she cares for a supposed miraculous girl, who has survived without sustenance for four months. The novel received positive reviews upon release and was nominated for the 2016 Giller Prize. [1]
The actor, who played Winnie Cooper on the sitcom from 1988 to 1993, opened up about how she views the controversial ending. In the final episode, which aired May 12, 1993, the narrator …
Wonder is a 2017 American coming of age comedy-drama film directed by Stephen Chbosky, who co-wrote the screenplay with Steven Conrad and Jack Thorne. It is based on the 2012 novel by R. J. Palacio and stars Julia Roberts , Owen Wilson , Jacob Tremblay , Mandy Patinkin , and Daveed Diggs .
Director Alice Rohrwacher based the movie on her memories of her childhood working for her parents, who were beekeepers. [6] Rohrwacher stated that some parts of the film were filmed illegally, particularly the parts with the bees which they were not supposed to film for insurance purposes and which she filmed anyway on a national holiday when no one was around to stop her.