Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A Killer Paradox (Korean: 살인자ㅇ난감) is a 2024 South Korean crime thriller dark comedy television series written by Kim Da-min, directed by Lee Chang-hee, and starring Choi Woo-shik, Son Suk-ku, and Lee Hee-joon.
Paradox is a 2018 American musical film written and directed by Daryl Hannah, and starring Neil Young and his current backing band Promise of the Real. A soundtrack album, Paradox , by Young and the band was released to coincide with the film.
Paradox is an American science fiction action film written and directed by Michael Hurst. Zoë Bell and Adam Huss play scientists who invent a time travel machine. When the machine reveals that one of their team may be a saboteur, they attempt to unravel the mystery with the help of their mysterious benefactor, played by Malik Yoba.
Paradox Effect is a 2023 American action film written by Samuel Bartlett, Andrea Iervolino and Ferdinando Dell'Omo, directed by Scott Weintrob and starring Olga Kurylenko, Harvey Keitel and Alice Astons. After witnessing a murder, an ex-junkie is forced to cooperate with the killer to save her daughter's life.
Six Nations: Full Contact is a television documentary series produced in a collaboration between Netflix and the Six Nations, to give a behind-the-scenes look at the players and matches of the Six Nations Championship. [1] The first season, covering the 2023 Six Nations Championship, was released on 24 January 2024. [2] [3]
Paradox (Chinese: 殺破狼・貪狼) is a 2017 neo-noir [4] Hong Kong action film directed by Wilson Yip, co-produced by Soi Cheang, with action direction by Sammo Hung. Written by Jill Leung and Nick Cheuk , the film stars Louis Koo as a police inspector who travels to Pattaya to search for his teenage daughter and is aided by local ...
No. Title Directed by Original release date; 1 "A Happy Jail for Happy Inmates" Michele Josue: August 14, 2019 (): 2 "Everybody Needs a Second Chance" Michele Josue
Paradox is a 2010 science-fiction television film starring Kevin Sorbo, Steph Song and Christopher Judge, directed by Brenton Spencer, and based on a three-part graphic novel miniseries by Christos Gage.