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In Her Skin (also known as I Am You from the working title How to Change in 9 Weeks) is a 2009 Australian drama movie written and directed by Simone North. [2] The film is based on the true story of the murder of 15-year-old Rachel Barber, Ivan Southall 's granddaughter, who went missing on March 1, 1999.
On 24 March 2014, Sony Music India acquired the audio rights of the film. [21] The official soundtrack album cover of the film was released on 6 September 2014. [22] The audio launch was planned for a release in Canada, [23] but the film's producer, V. Ravichandran, asserted that the music of the Tamil version would be released at a grand event at the Nehru Indoor Stadium in Chennai on 12 ...
The Song is a 2014 American romantic drama film written and directed by Richard Ramsey. The film follows about a singer-songwriter, whose marriage suffers when the song he wrote for his wife propels him to stardom. The film was inspired by the Song of Songs and the life of Solomon.
You know exactly what you're getting when you sit down to watch "The Perfect Couple.". Netflix's latest limited series has a seemingly, ahem, perfect recipe: Beautiful Nantucket beaches, an ...
The accompanying music video for "I'm Not Perfect (But I'm Perfect for You)" was directed by Jones, and was the only video she directed. [3] The video cost $250,000, [ 4 ] and featured Jones wearing a huge black and white skirt hand-painted by artist and the assistant director Keith Haring in Paris.
"The Perfect Couple," a six-episode Netflix murder mystery series, features an opening credits scene so outlandish and memorable the cast can't help but laugh while explaining its origin story.
The films of Ryusuke Hamaguchi unspool with elegant everyday ease and yet anything can happen.. Lives take sudden detours. Seemingly minor characters become primary ones. People are brought ...
Movie Review Intelligence was a review aggregator website which collated and analyzed movie reviews. The site was established in 2009 by former studio executive David A. Gross, and has been described by critic Joe Williams as, "brainier than Rotten Tomatoes but less exclusive than Metacritic ".