We love the movies! In the theater! There’s nothing like it! Our latest outing was to M. Night Shyamalan‘s OLD. Watch to see our always honest opinion!
22.07.2021 - 19:13 / theplaylist.net
One of M. Night Shyamalan’s greatest mysteries will always concern “The Happening”: Was his 2008 killer trees thriller intentionally so ridiculous and unhinged? Or namely, was it aware of how funny it was? No such mistake or question will follow Shyamalan’s latest, an odd pitch-black comedy about a beach that ages its uninformed visitors a year for every 30 minutes.
We love the movies! In the theater! There’s nothing like it! Our latest outing was to M. Night Shyamalan‘s OLD. Watch to see our always honest opinion!
Blink-182 bandmates Mark Hoppus and Tom DeLonge reunited on the former’s radio show for a chat that included how M.
Split was a sequel to his Disney film Unbreakable.It wasn’t until an early screening of the film with the studio that Split‘s twist was revealed; that Bruce Willis’ Unbreakable character David Dunn existed in the same universe as the new film.“I go to the Universal Studios chairman, (the) marketing team, everyone’s in the theatre. We pull down the lights and we play them Split,” Shyamalan recalled on the ReelBlend podcast.“The lights go down.
Saleka Shyamalan is opening up about working on her dad M. Night Shyamalan‘s new movie, Old.
Jenelle Riley Deputy Awards, Features EditorM.
Rotten Tomatoes.Shyamalan’s movies have grossed more than $3 billion globally.“Old” is also now the lowest-grossing film to debut at number 1 in July since 1996, Rotten Tomatoes said — excluding last year when theaters were largely closed across the country amid the pandemic.It was a muted weekend overall for movie theaters, according to the review website, as fears over rising COVID-19 cases and the convenience of at-home streaming took its toll.
Good in the ‘Wood?I just got back from seeing Old, one of the many new movie releases out now in movie theaters.I took a look at theaters near me to compare movie showtimes and settled on going to the 7:45 p.m.
M. Night Shyamalan has shed some light on the ending to his box office-topping film Old.In an interview with NME, the filmmaker was asked if he had ever considered any alternative endings to the film.“The structure of the movie was always this way,” Shyamalan explained.
In a new featurette, Shyamalan and his team discuss their search for a location that would perfectly fit their needs for "Old": a beach that at first seemed like a secluded paradise among towering cliffs, but would soon become a prison from which its victims can't escape.
Old is on top at the box office.
Rebecca Rubin Film and Media ReporterIn a twist fitting for an M. Night Shyamalan thriller, “Old” is the No.
One of M. Night Shyamalan’s greatest mysteries will always concern “The Happening”: Was his 2008 killer trees thriller intentionally so ridiculous and unhinged? Or namely, was it aware of how funny it was? No such mistake or question will follow Shyamalan’s latest, an odd pitch-black comedy about a beach that ages its uninformed visitors a year for every 30 minutes.
Making the movie Old was a family affair for director M. Night Shyamalan, who hired his daughter Ishana to serve as the second unit director.
(Spoilers ahead for, well, most of M. Night Shyamalan's movies.
Jazz Tangcay Artisans EditorM. Night Shyamalan’s “Old” is a family affair, at least behind the scenes.The film follows a group of tourists staying at a luxury resort who discover that the secluded beach where they are relaxing causes them to rapidly age.
Ellise Shafer administrator“Old,” the newest thriller from director M. Night Shyamalan, is poised to top the domestic box office charts this weekend with an estimated $15.75 million.The Universal film, starring Alex Wolff and Thomasin McKenzie, took in $6.8 million from 3,355 theaters on Friday.
Alex Wolff has done his fair share of emotionally-daunting films, coming off movies like "Hereditary" and "Pig." But working with director M. Night Shyamalan on his laterst film "Old," the actor says he learned something new from the man he calls his "hero." "I feel like a big thing I learned from him is to not bring your process into a movie necessarily, and instead to adapt to his process," Wolff told TheWrap.
Shyamalan’s films over the past several years have suffered from convoluted plotting, self-importance and overall tedium. Even some of his most digestible work, like the TV show “Wayward Pines,” peaked fast and then quickly trailed off.But breaking the pattern, “Old” is pleasantly straightforward and has a tough-to-pin-down quality that has been missing from the “Sixth Sense” director’s recent work — confidence.