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The Disappointments Room is a 2016 American psychological horror film directed by D. J. Caruso, written by Caruso and Wentworth Miller, and starring Kate Beckinsale and Mel Raido as a couple in a new house that contains a hidden room with a dark, haunted past. The film was inspired by an HGTV episode from a segment called "If Walls Could Talk".
John Edward Williams (August 29, 1922 – March 3, 1994) was an American author, editor and professor. He was best known for his novels Butcher's Crossing (1960), Stoner (1965), and Augustus (1972), [ 1 ] which won a U.S. National Book Award .
Daniel John Caruso Jr. (/ k ə ˈ r uː s oʊ /; born January 17, 1965) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter. His work encompasses a variety of genres, including thriller ( Disturbia , Taking Lives ), drama ( Standing Up ), horror ( The Disappointments Room ), and action ( I Am Number Four , XXX: Return of Xander Cage ).
I watched the movie and was wondering if "disappointments rooms" is or was a thing: that it has basis in non-fiction. I did a search at Google Books which returned no results of the phenomenon described in the movie: [1] [2]
John Travolta plays the notorious mafia boss with an impressive hairpiece. The film is directed by Kevin Connolly, best known as an actor on “Entourage.” Critics weren’t happy with any of it.
John Alfred Williams (December 5, 1925 – July 3, 2015) was an African American author, journalist, and academic. His novel The Man Who Cried I Am was a bestseller in 1967. [ 1 ] Also a poet, he won an American Book Award for his 1998 collection Safari West .
Williams was born in Cardiff, where he currently lives, and grew up in a middle-class neighbourhood. In his teens, he joined the punk scene and moved to Camden Town to live in a squat and play in bands. [1] After discovering the works of Elmore Leonard he began writing book reviews for NME and The Sunday Times. [2]
In the United States, When the Bough Breaks was released on September 9, 2016, alongside The Disappointments Room, Sully and The Wild Life, with the studio projecting it to gross $10–12 million from 2,246 theaters in its opening weekend.