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The Rift (Spanish: La grieta) is a 1990 Spanish science-fiction horror film directed by Juan Piquer Simón and starring Jack Scalia, R. Lee Ermey and Ray Wise.The story concerns an engineer (Scalia) who is blamed for the disappearance of the submarine he designed, and leads an investigation team to the depths of the ocean, where he encounters an array of abnormal creatures.
[8] On Metacritic, Sleepwalking holds a rank of 56 out of a 100 based on 6 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". [9] American newspaper The Christian Science Monitor praised the film, commenting that "Despite its deficiencies, and the inadequate screen time allotted to Theron (who's quite good), "Sleepwalking" has a core of feeling ...
The sleepwalking scene (Act V Scene 1) from William Shakespeare's tragic play Macbeth (1606) is one of the most famous scenes in all of literature. In Walley Chamberlain Oulton's two act farce The Sleep-Walker; or, Which is the Lady (1812), "Somno", a histrionic failed-actor-turned-manservant relives his wished-for roles when sleepwalking. [64]
Rift (Icelandic: Rökkur) is a 2017 Icelandic psychological thriller-horror film written and directed by Erlingur Thoroddsen. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It stars Björn Stefánsson and Sigurður Þór Óskarsson as a gay couple who must address their fractured relationship whilst experiencing disturbing events at a remote cabin in Iceland.
The term was used by Langdon Winner in his essay Technology as forms of life. Winner puts forth the idea that we are simply in a state of sleepwalking in our mediations with technology. This sleepwalking is caused by a number of factors. One of the primary causes is the way we view technology as tools, something that can be put down and picked ...
The Sleepwalker is a 2014 drama film directed by Mona Fastvold, and co-written by Fastvold and Brady Corbet. [1] [2] The film stars Gitte Witt, Christopher Abbott, Stephanie Ellis and Corbet. The film premiered in-competition in the US Dramatic Category at 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 20, 2014. [3] [4]
Sarah awakes in the sleep laboratory with the original White, who tells her the police found her sleepwalking. He brought her to the laboratory to monitor. Although she remembers nothing, data shows she dreamed the entire night. White thinks the stalker might be an anchor connecting the two worlds and asks why her husband committed suicide.
Critic Natalia Keogan of Paste magazine further criticized the film as part of a cheap and profitable buy in by Hulu into the true crime genre, citing the "incessant churning out of half-baked documentaries that serve little purpose outside of boasting exclusive access to the families of perpetrators and victims alike."