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Both the films have the same director, shooting the entire film at one location and the central characters suffering from anxiety disorder. On this, the director Kriplani replied, "As an audience it was a fun movie and I really enjoyed but I understand why people compare Phobia with Kaun because both are psychological thriller and both have a ...
Mad Love – 1995 – character of Casey Roberts played by Drew Barrymore [12] Fear – 1996 – character of David McCall played by Mark Wahlberg [12] Girl, Interrupted – 1999 – character of Susanna Kaysen played by Winona Ryder [14] Thirteen – 2003 – characters of Evie and Tracy played by Nikki Reed and Evan Rachel Wood respectively. [15]
Phobia, also known by its original title of Alone, is a 2013 supernatural psychological horror drama film and the feature film directorial debut of Rory Douglas Abel. [1] The movie had its world premiere on 3 November 2013 at the Drunken Zombie Film Festival and stars Michael Jefferson as an agoraphobic widower that begins to believe that he is being haunted by his wife's specter.
Anna suffers from severe agoraphobia and has not left her childhood home in the ten years since her father died. She takes care of her brother, Conrad, who is dying of pancreatic cancer, and receives daily food deliveries from Dan, with whom she is friends. Her brother tries to encourage her to move on and leave the house.
Claire, who suffers from severe agoraphobia, refuses to be seen, hiding herself in a locked safe room. She has decided to trust Oldman, as his own disorder means he also avoids physical contact with others.
Meanwhile, Alexandra's visions of her character Alex Rover help her to overcome her agoraphobia in order to travel to the island to rescue Nim. Nim, expecting "Alex" (the fictional male character), at first rejects Alexandra, but later relents and they share a meal. The next day, Nim starts to cry, fearing that she has now lost both her parents.
Osgood Perkins, the director of serial killer horror, Longlegs, has revealed the meaning behind the movie’s ending in a new interview. Set in the 1990s, the film follows FBI agent Lee Harker ...
Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com said, "Director Joe Wright puts many of his showy camerawork instincts on display, making Adams' character's Manhattan brownstone feel both cavernous and claustrophobic." [39] Stephanie Zacharek of Time called it the film a "coolly tasteful psychological thriller."