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The website's consensus reads: "There are good things and there are Bad Things, and while the film may not rise above its potential -- or source of inspiration -- it delivers a memorable experience." [6] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 53 out of 100, based on 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average ...
The 'Speak No Evil' actor enjoys "playing with the audience’s moral center" in movies James McAvoy Explains the 'Joys' of Doing 'Bad Stuff' Onscreen as an Extreme Villain (Exclusive) Skip to ...
When we were at the point of getting the film financed, we had a lawyer look over the script and the film to make sure there weren't too many similarities. I mean, there were things we had to change; for example, one of the characters in the movie was a baker, and there was also a baker in our script, so we had to change some very minor things.
Despite having a cast that includes Judi Dench, Ian McKellen, and Taylor Swift, it seems as though extra effort went into making sure nobody would enjoy this movie, even people who saw the ...
Bad Kids Go to Hell is a 2012 American black comedy thriller film directed by Matthew Spradlin, who co-wrote it with Barry Wernick. Based on Spradlin and Wernick's graphic novel of the same name, the film stars Amanda Alch, Marc Donato, Augie Duke, Roger Edwards, Ali Faulkner, and Cameron Deane Stewart as six prep school students, who serve detention in a seemingly haunted school library. [1]
This is where things get tricky. "We're continually sending kids mixed messages about screen time," Dr. Naline Lai, a pediatrician at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, tells Yahoo Life. "A lot ...
Academy is a sequel to Bad Kids Go to Hell (2012). The screenplay was written by Barry Wernick and James R. Hallam. Both Hell and Academy are based on Wernick and Matthew Spradlin's best-selling graphic novel Bad Kids Go 2 Hell (2009), which is about the stories of the Wildman and Calloway children at an evil prep school.
The film follows three at-risk students during a year at Black Rock Continuation High School. It captures Principal Vonda Viland as she coaches the teens: Lee Bridges, who has a young son with a classmate and is facing the challenge of supporting his family; Jennifer Coffield, who lacks family support for her scholastic efforts; and Joey McGee, who grapples with drug use and instability at home.