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Hell Baby is a 2013 American horror-comedy film written and directed by Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon. It stars Rob Corddry, Leslie Bibb, Keegan-Michael Key, Riki Lindhome, Rob Huebel and Paul Scheer. Writer-directors Garant and Lennon also co-star as a pair of priests. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2013. [2]
Tallulah is a 2016 American comedy-drama film written and directed by Sian Heder (in her feature directorial debut) and starring Elliot Page, Allison Janney, and Tammy Blanchard. The film revolves around a young woman who unexpectedly takes a baby from her irresponsible mother and pretends the child is her own.
Babygirl is a 2024 American erotic thriller film written, directed, and produced by Halina Reijn. The film stars Nicole Kidman as a high-powered CEO who puts her career and family on the line when she begins an affair with a much younger intern (Harris Dickinson). Sophie Wilde and Antonio Banderas also star.
Best Documentary Film: Daughters: Nominated [12] San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle: December 15, 2024: Best Documentary Feature: Nominated [13] St. Louis Film Critics Association: December 15, 2024: Best Documentary Feature: Nominated [14] Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association: December 18, 2024: Best Documentary Film: 2nd place ...
The movie is reminiscent, at times, of “Fair Play,” but it’s also a tale of adultery that pushes genuine emotional buttons, the way “Unfaithful” did 20 years ago. And that’s rooted in ...
The story is centered on a young girl known as Sharon Marshall, who was abducted by a federal fugitive Franklin Delano Floyd and then raised as his daughter. [3] Over the course of the next two decades, she was sexually assaulted by Floyd, forced to marry him and ultimately died in a suspicious hit-and-run accident in 1990. [ 4 ]
Hell Girl (Japanese: 地獄少女, Hepburn: Jigoku Shōjo) is a 2019 Japanese film adaptation of the anime series of the same name by Takahiro Omori. It is directed by Kōji Shiraishi and distributed by GAGA Pictures and Constantin Film. It was released on November 15, 2019. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Found is her second major documentary, following 2017's Step. [6] She traveled to China three times over the course of the production, the final journey with the girls. [7] The documentary was filmed in the cinéma vérité style; Lipitz stated that respecting the girls' emotional well-being during production was a central concern. [7]