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Pet Sematary Two is a 1992 American supernatural horror film directed by Mary Lambert and written by Richard Outten.It is the sequel to the film Pet Sematary (1989), which was based on Stephen King's 1983 novel of the same name and the second film in the Pet Sematary film series.
Edward Walter Furlong (born August 2, 1977) is an American actor. He won Saturn and MTV Movie Awards for his breakthrough performance at age 13 as John Connor in James Cameron's 1991 science fiction action film Terminator 2: Judgment Day, which was followed by a mini-sequel, short attraction film T2-3D: Battle Across Time.
Animal Factory is a 2000 neo-noir film directed by Steve Buscemi and starring Willem Dafoe, Edward Furlong, Danny Trejo, John Heard, Mickey Rourke, Tom Arnold, Seymour Cassel, Shell Galloway and Mark Boone, Jr. Set in San Quentin, the film is about life in prison.
Edward Furlong, Anthony Edwards, Clancy Brown: United States Based on a novel by Stephen King [26] Poison Ivy: Katt Shea Sara Gilbert, Tom Skerritt, Cheryl Ladd, Drew Barrymore United States [27] Prom Night IV: Deliver Us from Evil: Clay Borris: Nicole deBoer, Alden Kane, Joy Tanner: United States Canada [27] Raising Cain: Brian De Palma
The movie was directed by Barbet Schroeder and starred Meryl Streep as Dr. Carolyn Ryan, Liam Neeson as Ben Ryan, Edward Furlong as Jacob Ryan, and Julia Weldon as Judith Ryan (who also narrated the movie). Alfred Molina, John Heard, and Alison Folland appear in supporting roles.
Dark Reel is a 2008 horror starring Tiffany Shepis, Edward Furlong, Agung Bagus, Tony Snegoff, Mercedes McNab, Alexandra Holden, Barry Ford, Tony Todd and Lance Henriksen and directed by Josh Eisenstadt. [1]
The film stars Edward Furlong, Tara Reid, David Boreanaz, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Dennis Hopper, Marcus Chong, Tito Ortiz, Rena Owen, Danny Trejo, and Macy Gray. The Crow: Wicked Prayer received a one-week theatrical release in Seattle, Washington on June 3, 2005, before being released direct-to-video on July 19, by Dimension Films. It was released ...
Engert was the second director hired to direct Aftermath and he was brought on to the project four days before principal photography commenced. [2] He stated that he chose to work on Aftermath due to the film's script, which he felt "focused on the characters a lot more than the situation they're in" and because the script did not require a large special effects budget or an overly large cast. [2]