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Why Willis From Things Heard And Seen Looks So Familiar
Why Willis From Things Heard And Seen Looks So Familiar Netflix
By Adam Cetorelli/April 21, 2021 6:06 pm EDT
A tale of a secret-riddled marriage, a move to a creaky house in rural New York, and the strange phenomena that occur therein is coming to Netflix April 29 in the form of Things Heard and Seen. Adapted from the novel All Things Cease to Appear by Elizabeth Brundage, the movie promises to be a scary one, as can be inferred from the trailer alone, which dropped earlier this month. The movie does not appear to rely solely on cheap jump-scares to get viewers out of their seats. This supernatural psychological horror film boasts an A-list cast, with Amanda Seyfried and James Norton in the starring roles as Catherine and George Clare.
Film of the Week: Words On Bathroom Walls (Cert 12, 112 mins) By Contributor Published: 09:00, 13 March 2021
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A teenager struggles to come to terms with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Picture: PA Photo/Sony Pictures Releasing/Jacob Yakob
Available from March 15 on Amazon Prime Video/BT TV Store/iTunes/Sky Store/TalkTalk TV Store and other download and streaming services
Starring: Charlie Plummer, Taylor Russell, Molly Parker, Walton Goggins, AnnaSophia Robb, Devon Bostick, Lobo Sebastian, Beth Grant.
Witty, introspective high school student Adam Petrizelli (Charlie Plummer) is diagnosed with schizophrenia, which manifests as a pervasive, spider-like darkness that leeches into his waking visions.
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It is so hard to do a movie like this well. Diary of a Wimpy Kid is a PG-rated comedy about the hero s first year of middle school, and it s nimble, bright and funny. It doesn t dumb down. It doesn t patronize. It knows something about human nature. It isn t as good as A Christmas Story, as few movies are, but it deserves a place in the same sentence. Here is a family movie you don t need a family to enjoy. You must, however, have been a wimpy kid. Most kids are wimpy in their secret hearts. Those that never were grow up to be cage fighters.
Last modified on Tue 26 Jan 2021 07.02 EST
âShe might be crazy, or she might be the sanest person Iâve ever met.â Some cringingly obvious lines really lower the tone of this deep south melodrama (released in the US last year with the title Tuscaloosa). Itâs an adaptation of Glasgow Phillipsâs novel about a white kid in early-70s Alabama: a psychiatristâs son, he falls in love with one of his dadâs patients. The director is Philip Harder, a veteran music promo maker who evokes time and place with the intoxicatingly intense colour and heightened reality of a William Eggleston photograph. But his film, though well-meaning, is disappointingly tame and soap opera-ish.