Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Screaming Woman is a 1972 American made-for-television horror-thriller film starring Olivia de Havilland and directed by Jack Smight. It is loosely based on a short story by Ray Bradbury (which in turn was based on his 1948 radio play for the CBS show Suspense ) with a script written by Merwin Gerard.
A dying millionaire (Daniel O'Herlihy) builds a glass coffin, much to the amusement of his greedy brother (Denholm Elliott).After the millionaire dies, his brother is told that if he can find the millionaire's savings, which are hidden inside his mansion, he'll gets everything.
Screaming is a British television sitcom which originally aired on BBC 1 in 1992. [1] Three women, former school friends, sharing a home have all unwittingly had a relationship with the same man. Main cast
A documentary film, Still Screaming: The Ultimate Scary Movie Retrospective, [274] was released in April 2011. This film was written and directed by Ryan Turek. The documentary discusses the first three movies in the series and includes interviews with Wes Craven, Neve Campbell, David Arquette and other cast members. [275]
Scream is a standalone serialized anthology series that follows a group of teenagers being stalked and targeted by a masked serial killer.. The first two seasons, set in a fictional version of the town of Lakewood, Colorado, follow the story of Emma Duval, a teenage girl, who is linked to the horrific events of the town's past.
The Screaming Skull was featured in a ninth season episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, a comedy television series which features a human and his robot creations watching bad films while providing a running commentary which mocks the film being shown. It was featured alongside an episode of The Gumby Show entitled "Robot
"The Sign" is the 49th episode of the third series of the Australian animated television program Bluey, and the 153rd episode overall. Bluey explores playtime, imagination, and family life as experienced by the titular character, Bluey—an Australian Cattle Dog—and her family and friends.
In her positive review of the episode, The A.V. Club ' s Emily L. Stephens gave the episode an A, writing that the "comfort" of the original Twin Peaks is "entirely eschewed", praising the Glass Box subplot as "a remark upon the creation and the consumption of television and film" and calling the episode an "unfiltered Lynchian vision ...