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Ali Cobby Eckermann (born 1963) is an Australian poet of Aboriginal Australian ancestry. She is a Yankunytjatjara woman born on Kaurna land in South Australia . Eckermann has written poetry collections, verse novels and a memoir, and has been shortlisted for or won several literary awards.
The film is told through the partnership between Cobb and sportswriter Al Stump who served as a ghostwriter of Cobb's autobiography. Some critics lauded the film and Jones's performance, but the box office results for the film were underwhelming, grossing little over $1 million on a budget of $25.5 million. [1] [2]
Alan Ng of Film Threat gave the film a score of 8.5/10, writing: "Though I found the story about the mutual admiration society between Don and Allen worth watching, the fun of All Eyes is the exciting and thrilling second half about a farmhouse full of booby traps." [2] Dread Central called it, "The Best Recent Indie Horror Film You’ve Never ...
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The movie features the following Pet Shop Boys songs, either in their original form, played as background music or sung by the characters: "It Couldn't Happen Here" (from the album Actually) "Suburbia" (from the album Please) "Opportunities (Let's Make Lots of Money)" (from the album Please) "Hit Music" (from the album Actually)
Justice is a young African American woman living in South Central, Los Angeles, named by her late mother who gave birth to her while attending law school.After the fatal shooting of her boyfriend Markell, Justice becomes deeply depressed, spending most of her time with her cat named Whiteboy in the house that she inherited from her grandmother, and only going out to her job at a local hair salon.
The website's critical consensus reads, "Despite Demetrius Shipp Jr.'s fine lead performance, All Eyez on Me is mostly a surface-skimming, by-the-numbers biopic of a larger-than-life icon." [ 40 ] On Metacritic , which assigns a normalized rating, the film has a weighted average score of 38 out of 100, based on 22 critics, indicating "generally ...
Poetry (Korean: 시; Hanja: 詩; RR: Si) is a 2010 South Korean-French drama film written and directed by Lee Chang-dong. [2] It tells the story of a suburban woman in her 60s who begins to develop an interest in poetry while struggling with Alzheimer's disease and her irresponsible grandson.