Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Eye of God is a 1997 crime drama film written and directed by Tim Blake Nelson and adapted from his stage play of the same name. It stars Martha Plimpton, Kevin Anderson, Nick Stahl, and Hal Holbrook. The film follows two plot lines which are revealed to be connected in a nonlinear narrative.

    • Eye of God, by Tim Blake Nelson
    • Minnow Pictures
  2. The Eye of God è un film muto del 1916 diretto da Phillips Smalley e Lois Weber. Secondo Wid's, la regia sarebbe della sola Weber che firma anche la sceneggiatura ed è tra gli interpreti del film. Nel cast, appaiono anche Tyrone Power, Ethel Weber e Charles Gunn.

    • The Eye of God
    • inglese
  3. Eye of God (1997) Movie Info Synopsis A traumatized teen crosses paths with a young waitress (Martha Plimpton) married to a violent former convict (Kevin Anderson).

    • (17)
    • Tim Blake Nelson
    • R
    • Martha Plimpton
  4. 30 gen 1998 · Eye of God. Roger Ebert January 30, 1998. Tweet. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. Rural Oklahoma. Town named Kingfisher. A woman named Ainsley sits in the convenience store by the road, watching strangers on their way through. She works in a hamburger shop. She's lonely.

  5. Overview. A small Oklahoma town is stripped of its innocence when one of its boys turns up mute and bloodied by the lakeside. Unable to tell his story, the local sheriff embarks on a quest to uncover the roots of a gruesome crime. He's led to Ainsley DuPree and her new husband, Jack, a man whose interest in family may very well outweigh his morals.

  6. 17 ott 1997 · Eye of God: Directed by Tim Blake Nelson. With Mary Kay Place, Nick Stahl, Chris Freihofer, Woody Watson. We see two stories told over four time lines, which wind down to a devastating ground zero collision, as we watch a double tragedy unfold in a small Oklahoma town.

  7. Eye of God is a bleak and tragic modernist parable about faith, loneliness, and human cruelty, by Tim Blake-Nelson, told with a meticulous but unpretentious visual style evoking the great regionalist artwork of Wood, Curry, and Wyeth, and the gothic fiction of Faulkner and Carson McCullers.