Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The plot focuses on a feminist journalist who becomes the target of a serial killer, who follows her to the hospital after attacking her in her home. Visiting Hours was released on May 28, 1982, and grossed $13.3 million at the box office on a budget of $6 million. The film received mostly negative reviews from critics.
Visiting Hours may refer to: Visiting Hours, a 1982 Canadian horror film starring Michael Ironside "Visiting Hours" (song), by Ed Sheeran, 2021 "Visiting Hours" (Slow Horses), a 2022 television episode "Visiting Hours", a song by Cardiac Arrest (later Cardiacs) from The Obvious Identity, 1980 "Visiting Hours", a song by Kero Kero Bonito from ...
[1] Alone in the Dark: Jack Sholder: Jack Palance, Donald Pleasence, Martin Landau: United States [2]Amityville II: The Possession: Damiano Damiani: James Olson, Burt Young, Rutanya Alda
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The plot follows a teenager spending the summer at her grandmother's inn—formerly a funeral home—where guests begin to disappear. Briefly released in eastern Canada in 1980, the film premiered in the United States and was re-released in its native Canada under the alternative title Funeral Home in the summer of 1982.
In it he outlines the following plot elements and ties it to a drawing, [59] following Whitcomb's prescriptions: Incident, emotion, crisis, suspense, climax, dénouement, conclusion. He does not make an accompanying diagram with any of these elements, but does argue that the line of emotion is important to stories on page 198.
Missing – Palme d'Or-winning 1982 film by Costa-Gavras about the CIA-backed coup against Chilean President Salvador Allende in 1973, and the disappearance of a U.S. journalist, based on Charles Horman; La passante du Sans-Souci – 1982 French film by Jacques Rouffio in which a humanitarian kills the ambassador of Paraguay, a former Nazi
Deadline is an interactive fiction detective video game published by Infocom in 1982. Written by Marc Blank, it was Infocom's third game.It was released for the Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Atari 8-bit computers, Commodore 64, IBM PC (as a self-booting disk), Osborne 1, TRS-80, and later for the Amiga and Atari ST.