The Man Who Laughs
The Man Who Laughs is a 1928 silent film directed by Paul Leni and based on a novel by Victor Hugo.
In 1690, Lord Clancharlie returns to England after exile but is accused of treason and captured by James II of England.
The Man Who Laughs is a 1928 silent film directed by Paul Leni and based on a novel by Victor Hugo.
In 1690, Lord Clancharlie returns to England after exile but is accused of treason and captured by James II of England.
A family lives in complete isolation, entirely cut off from society, and under the strict control of a father who keeps his children imprisoned with lies and false beliefs.
Shutter Island, an excellent work by Martin Scorsese, features a remarkable cast to stage a film that completely overturns the meaning of what we have seen during the performance in its finale.
Set in 1968 in the French Alps, a little girl is murdered by a mysterious figure dressed in black, a serial killer in female attire. Her nanny, Ginevra Storelli, soon moves to Venice, and the case is closed. Four years later, the nightmare repeats…
An unemployed worker finds a strange pair of sunglasses. When he wears them, he discovers that the world is dominated by extraterrestrials and subliminal messages.
Josephine Myrtle Corbin was born in Clabourne, Texas, in 1868.
She suffered from an extremely rare anomaly: she was born with four legs. Moreover, she had two genital apparatuses, one of which belonged to a conjoined twin that did not fully develop in the womb.
A Copenhagen drug dealer incurs a large debt with a powerful local boss.
He will find himself forced to find a lot of money in a true race against time.
Duane is a young and quiet guy who is often seen carrying a large wicker basket. What seems like a comedic gimmick hides a terrible and monstrous secret related to the boy’s past, which inevitably affects his present.
The Gremlins are mythical creatures from folklore that became particularly famous during World War II. Their legend is primarily linked to stories told by pilots of the Royal Air Force (RAF), who attributed unexplained malfunctions and failures in their aircraft to these mischievous little creatures.
On the outskirts of London, journalist Alan Foster is tasked with interviewing Edgar Allan Poe.
The journalist remains skeptical when Poe reveals that his stories are based on real events and, therefore, he doesn’t consider himself a novelist but merely a chronicler.