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Dark Places is a 2015 mystery film written and directed by Gilles Paquet-Brenner, based on Gillian Flynn's 2009 novel of the same name and stars Charlize Theron, Christina Hendricks, Nicholas Hoult, and Chloë Grace Moretz. The film was released in France on April 8, 2015, [4] and in the United States on August 7, 2015, by A24. [5]
Flynn wrote Sharp Objects while working as a reporter for Entertainment Weekly, writing the novel during nights and weekends, a few hours at a time. [3] She described the process of maintaining the book's "moist", "gothic tone" as challenging, contrasting with the more upbeat style required for her day job.
Dark Places was listed on The New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover fiction on May 29, 2009, where it was ranked #15 for the week ending May 23. It was included in an expanded listing of the top 35 best sellers that appeared only online (Only the top ten best sellers are included in the print edition). [1]
HBO is developing a limited series based on the Gillian Flynn novel “Dark Places,” Variety has learned exclusively. Flynn will serve as co-creator, writer, and co-showrunner on the project and ...
The film was shot towards the end of 1972 at an old asylum near Uxbridge. [2] Christopher Lee told his biographer Robert Pohle: "it was a fascinating, very clever story, a fantasy. It was shot in a house not far from Pinewood Studios: a house empty and abandoned, water dripping down the walls, no proper plumbing, no heating.
Dark Places may refer to: Dark Places, a mystery novel by Gillian Flynn; Dark Places, a 1973 British horror film; Dark Places, a 2015 mystery film, based on the Flynn novel "Dark Places" (song), a 2019 song by Beck from his album Hyperspace "Dark Places", a song by Hollywood Undead from Day of the Dead
George Harold "Hal" Bennett (April 21, 1930 – September 11, 2004) [1] [2] was an author known for a variety of books. His 1970 novel Lord of Dark Places was described as "a satirical and all but scatological attack on the phallic myth", [3] and was reprinted in 1997.
In 2015, Hoult had three other releases—the feature film adaptation of Gillian Flynn's mystery novel Dark Places; Owen Harris' dark comedy Kill Your Friends, based on the 2008 novel of the same name; and Equals, a dystopian, science-fiction romantic drama directed by Drake Doremus—all of which were critical failures and rank among the ...