This is what Scorsese didn’t want y’all to see in ‘The Big Shave’.
Separation
8-year-old Jenny (Violet McGraw) is constantly caught in the middle of the feuding between her lawyer mother Maggie (Mamie Gummer) and artist father Jeff (Rupert Friend). She leads a lonely but imaginative life, surrounded by puppets called “Grisly Kin”, which are based on the works of her father. When Maggie is tragically killed in a hit-and-run, Jeff and Jenny try to piece together a new life. But when Maggie’s father (Brian Cox) sues for custody, and babysitter Samantha (Madeline Brewer) tries to be the new woman of the house, life in their Brooklyn townhome takes a dark turn. The puppets and frightening characters come to life and Jenny is the only person who can see them. When the motives of the ghoulish creatures become clear, the lives of everyone are put very much in jeopardy.
Let me know if it's worth watchingWatching this flik "The Power."
Movie is creepy as hell!
It was REALLY slow!!Let me know if it's worth watching
The widow was okay. I'm watching a movie about big foot and the wendigo now.
The Widow was okay. It's kinda slow in the whole "here's the threat department. " It's Russian so it kinda has that whole folklore to go on. I'd recommend it if you don't have anything else that is 5 stars in the queue.How was it. I saw it pop up the other day and was about to pull the trigger, but backed off
Jakob's Wife
Starring Barbara Crampton, Larry Fessenden, Bonnie Aarons
Directed by Travis Stevens
Anne is married to a small-town minister and feels like her life and marriage have been shrinking over the past 30 years. After a chance encounter with “The Master,” she discovers bite marks on her neck, a new sense of power and an appetite to live bigger and bolder than ever. As Anne is increasingly torn between her enticing new existence and her life before, the body count grows and Jakob realizes he will have to fight for the wife he took for granted.
This comes out Friday. Always here for some new Barbara Crampton horror.
Trailer isn't great, but it's from the writer of You're Next and The Guest which were both really good.