Netflix has debuted a chilling new trailer for the Sarah Paulson led horror ‘Run’.
They say you can never escape a mother’s love… but for Chloe, that’s not a comfort — it’s a threat. There’s something unnatural, even sinister about the relationship between Chloe (newcomer Kiera Allen) and her mom, Diane (Sarah Paulson). Diane has raised her daughter in total isolation, controlling every move she’s made since birth, and there are secrets that Chloe’s only beginning to grasp. From the visionary writers, producers and director of the breakout film Searching, comes a suspense thriller that shows that when mom gets a little too close, you need to Run.
Directed by Aneesh Chaganty, the film stars Kiera Allen, Sara Sohn and Pat Healy alongside Paulson.
Also in trailers – Racism isn’t the only terror to face in 50s’ America; trailer drops for Amazon Prime series ‘Them...
They say you can never escape a mother’s love… but for Chloe, that’s not a comfort — it’s a threat. There’s something unnatural, even sinister about the relationship between Chloe (newcomer Kiera Allen) and her mom, Diane (Sarah Paulson). Diane has raised her daughter in total isolation, controlling every move she’s made since birth, and there are secrets that Chloe’s only beginning to grasp. From the visionary writers, producers and director of the breakout film Searching, comes a suspense thriller that shows that when mom gets a little too close, you need to Run.
Directed by Aneesh Chaganty, the film stars Kiera Allen, Sara Sohn and Pat Healy alongside Paulson.
Also in trailers – Racism isn’t the only terror to face in 50s’ America; trailer drops for Amazon Prime series ‘Them...
- 3/24/2021
- by Zehra Phelan
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Stars: John Cho, Debra Messing, Joseph Lee, Michelle La, Sara Sohn | Written by Aneesh Chaganty, Sev Ohanian | Directed by Aneesh Chaganty
John Cho stars in this inventively told missing person mystery that plays out entirely on computer screens. The result is a gripping and surprisingly moving thriller that shines an uncomfortable light on modern day digital interaction.
Produced by Timur Bekmambetov, Searching opens with an efficient and powerfully emotional montage sequence that rivals the opening of Pixar’s Up. Through a series of messages, videos and calendar appointments on a computer screen, we see various milestones in the life of the Kim family, including the birth of baby Margot (played as a teenager by Michelle La) and mother Pam (Sara Sohm) being diagnosed with, and succumbing to a terminal case of lymphoma, leaving husband David (Cho) utterly distraught.
It quickly becomes clear that we’re seeing everything through David’s computer,...
John Cho stars in this inventively told missing person mystery that plays out entirely on computer screens. The result is a gripping and surprisingly moving thriller that shines an uncomfortable light on modern day digital interaction.
Produced by Timur Bekmambetov, Searching opens with an efficient and powerfully emotional montage sequence that rivals the opening of Pixar’s Up. Through a series of messages, videos and calendar appointments on a computer screen, we see various milestones in the life of the Kim family, including the birth of baby Margot (played as a teenager by Michelle La) and mother Pam (Sara Sohm) being diagnosed with, and succumbing to a terminal case of lymphoma, leaving husband David (Cho) utterly distraught.
It quickly becomes clear that we’re seeing everything through David’s computer,...
- 1/7/2019
- by Matthew Turner
- Nerdly
The last weekend of the summer holidays was dominated by strong holdovers.
RankFilm / DistributorThree-day gross (Aug 31-Sept 2) Running gross Week 1 Christopher Robin (Disney) £1.2m £10.6m 3 2 Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (Universal) £963,307 £61.1m 7 3 BlackKklansman (Universal) £921,474 £3.1m 2 4 The Meg (Warner Bros) £881.000 £14m 3 5 Incredibles 2 (Disney) £765,000 £53.3m 8
Source: Screen International
The last weekend of the summer holidays before children in England, Wales and Northern Ireland return to school was dominated by strong holdovers.
Disney
Disney’s Christopher Robin took the UK box office crown for the third week in a row with a weekend gross of £1.2m to take it to a...
RankFilm / DistributorThree-day gross (Aug 31-Sept 2) Running gross Week 1 Christopher Robin (Disney) £1.2m £10.6m 3 2 Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again (Universal) £963,307 £61.1m 7 3 BlackKklansman (Universal) £921,474 £3.1m 2 4 The Meg (Warner Bros) £881.000 £14m 3 5 Incredibles 2 (Disney) £765,000 £53.3m 8
Source: Screen International
The last weekend of the summer holidays before children in England, Wales and Northern Ireland return to school was dominated by strong holdovers.
Disney
Disney’s Christopher Robin took the UK box office crown for the third week in a row with a weekend gross of £1.2m to take it to a...
- 9/3/2018
- by Louise Tutt
- ScreenDaily
Will Cold War be one of this year’s foreign language successes?
There’s a variety of new releases on offer in the UK this weekend, from an adult-rated puppet comedy, to Idris Elba’s directorial debut, and a Cannes award-winning Polish drama.
Starting with the latter, Pawel Pawlikowski’s Cold War rolls out in 63 UK cinemas via Curzon Artificial Eye from today (Aug 30).
The film scooped the best director prize for Pawlikowski at Cannes in May this year, and the filmmaker has hosted a variety of Q&A screenings in the UK prior to the official release, meaning it...
There’s a variety of new releases on offer in the UK this weekend, from an adult-rated puppet comedy, to Idris Elba’s directorial debut, and a Cannes award-winning Polish drama.
Starting with the latter, Pawel Pawlikowski’s Cold War rolls out in 63 UK cinemas via Curzon Artificial Eye from today (Aug 30).
The film scooped the best director prize for Pawlikowski at Cannes in May this year, and the filmmaker has hosted a variety of Q&A screenings in the UK prior to the official release, meaning it...
- 8/31/2018
- by Tom Grater
- ScreenDaily
Chicago – Face it, fellow modernists, we live on our screens. It was inevitable that entire films would soon be set there, and the latest is “Searching.” Combining the nightmare of a missing teenager with the abilities of social media, cameras and devices, filmmakers Aneesh Chaganty and Sev Ohanian “screen it” to the max.
With the actions taking place all on screens, David Kim (John Cho) is a single Dad who is coping with the loss of his wife. His daughter Margot (Michelle La) seems to be a stable teen, until one night she doesn’t check in. Through circumstances, David doesn’t realize she’s missing until the next morning, and is assigned the detached Detective Vick (Debra Messing) when he goes to the police. The inaction of law enforcement frustrates him, so he begins to dig online for any clue to his daughter’s whereabouts. Pixel by digital pixel...
With the actions taking place all on screens, David Kim (John Cho) is a single Dad who is coping with the loss of his wife. His daughter Margot (Michelle La) seems to be a stable teen, until one night she doesn’t check in. Through circumstances, David doesn’t realize she’s missing until the next morning, and is assigned the detached Detective Vick (Debra Messing) when he goes to the police. The inaction of law enforcement frustrates him, so he begins to dig online for any clue to his daughter’s whereabouts. Pixel by digital pixel...
- 8/30/2018
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Since 1997, Searching star John Cho has appeared in a diverse array of film and television (remember when he had the knife-wielding roommate in Felicity?). When he appeared in American Pie as the “Milf guy” he not only popularized the term but gained a reputation for his comedic chops. This paved the road for Harold & Kumar Go To White Castle which gained a rabid following and spawned two sequels. On the surface, the Harold & Kumar franchise may be a stoner comedy, but it was a benchmark for Asian Americans in film with two Asian American male leads (the other being Kal Penn) in a major studio comedy and they were love interests.
Cho has been a quiet trailblazer when it comes to Asian American representation in film and TV, stepping out of the comedy box and proving himself a versatile actor, taking on blockbusters like Star Trek, TV sitcoms like the underrated Selfie,...
Cho has been a quiet trailblazer when it comes to Asian American representation in film and TV, stepping out of the comedy box and proving himself a versatile actor, taking on blockbusters like Star Trek, TV sitcoms like the underrated Selfie,...
- 8/29/2018
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
Our chronic dependence on electronic devices and their ubiquitous availability have fully seeped into contemporary narrative: Since the audience navigates their daily conundrums and mundane tasks aided by screens, so do many characters in television and film. Today it’s not rare to see a text bubble pop up in a movie to let us in on a conversation happening via instant messages or for a Skype call to be a relevant plot point.
In first-time director Aneesh Chaganty’s groundbreaking digital mystery “Searching,” however, this practice is maximized to previously untapped extremes. Computer interfaces stop being a storytelling accessory; instead, they offer the entire field of vision. The silver screen mirrors the leading man’s desktop — and later all other gadgets used during his mission — as if connected via Hdmi cable.
Saturated green pastures and an idyllic blue sky in the opening shot announce we are in the Bliss...
In first-time director Aneesh Chaganty’s groundbreaking digital mystery “Searching,” however, this practice is maximized to previously untapped extremes. Computer interfaces stop being a storytelling accessory; instead, they offer the entire field of vision. The silver screen mirrors the leading man’s desktop — and later all other gadgets used during his mission — as if connected via Hdmi cable.
Saturated green pastures and an idyllic blue sky in the opening shot announce we are in the Bliss...
- 8/24/2018
- by Carlos Aguilar
- The Wrap
Exclusive: Searching director Aneesh Chaganty has selected five burgeoning filmmakers who will get a chance to see their short films come to life on the big screen via his YouTube Space Director’s Lab.
Participants are Sarah Rotella and Adriana Dilonardo from Unsolicited Project, Tony E. Valenzuela from BlackBoxTV, Shae-Lee Shackleford from SketchShe, Tim Hautekiet from TimH Films, and Mikey Murphy from Mikey Murphy. Each original short, which can be viewed here, will also be screened ahead of a special showing of Searching this Thursday in Los Angeles and the winner will be announced by Chaganty. The winning short will play ahead of Searching in select theaters starting the next day.
27-year-old Chaganty, who landed a spot on Google Creative Lab Five team after releasing a Google Glass short titled Seeds, served as a mentor to the participants.
“I’m honored to have hosted this workshop and to be part...
Participants are Sarah Rotella and Adriana Dilonardo from Unsolicited Project, Tony E. Valenzuela from BlackBoxTV, Shae-Lee Shackleford from SketchShe, Tim Hautekiet from TimH Films, and Mikey Murphy from Mikey Murphy. Each original short, which can be viewed here, will also be screened ahead of a special showing of Searching this Thursday in Los Angeles and the winner will be announced by Chaganty. The winning short will play ahead of Searching in select theaters starting the next day.
27-year-old Chaganty, who landed a spot on Google Creative Lab Five team after releasing a Google Glass short titled Seeds, served as a mentor to the participants.
“I’m honored to have hosted this workshop and to be part...
- 8/20/2018
- by Amanda N'Duka
- Deadline Film + TV
Tapping into how technology has invaded nearly every facet of our lives, Aneesh Chaganty’s Searching (which was previously known as Search) is an incredible piece of filmmaking and a stunning feature-length debut from an up-and-coming director who has crafted one of the most innovative and uniquely gripping thrillers to come out in some time. While his approach may be reminiscent of recent films like Unfriended, The Den, or even Open Windows, Searching confidently blazes its own path, perfectly blending tension and tech, and giving us a story with a real emotional core at its center, which hit me harder than I was expecting. Simply put, Searching is a truly exemplary effort from everyone involved.
Told through the use of laptops, iPhones, and other portable electronic devices, Searching first introduces us to the Kim family through a montage of visuals, including home videos, pictures, texts, and emails. Through these images,...
Told through the use of laptops, iPhones, and other portable electronic devices, Searching first introduces us to the Kim family through a montage of visuals, including home videos, pictures, texts, and emails. Through these images,...
- 8/1/2018
- by Heather Wixson
- DailyDead
Stars: John Cho, Debra Messing, Joseph Lee, Michelle La, Sara Sohn | Written by Aneesh Chaganty, Sev Ohanian | Directed by Aneesh Chaganty
John Cho stars in this inventively told missing person mystery that plays out entirely on computer screens. The result is a gripping and surprisingly moving thriller that shines an uncomfortable light on modern day digital interaction.
Produced by Timur Bekmambetov, Searching opens with an efficient and powerfully emotional montage sequence that rivals the opening of Pixar’s Up. Through a series of messages, videos and calendar appointments on a computer screen, we see various milestones in the life of the Kim family, including the birth of baby Margot (played as a teenager by Michelle La) and mother Pam (Sara Sohm) being diagnosed with, and succumbing to a terminal case of lymphoma, leaving husband David (Cho) utterly distraught.
It quickly becomes clear that we’re seeing everything through David’s computer,...
John Cho stars in this inventively told missing person mystery that plays out entirely on computer screens. The result is a gripping and surprisingly moving thriller that shines an uncomfortable light on modern day digital interaction.
Produced by Timur Bekmambetov, Searching opens with an efficient and powerfully emotional montage sequence that rivals the opening of Pixar’s Up. Through a series of messages, videos and calendar appointments on a computer screen, we see various milestones in the life of the Kim family, including the birth of baby Margot (played as a teenager by Michelle La) and mother Pam (Sara Sohm) being diagnosed with, and succumbing to a terminal case of lymphoma, leaving husband David (Cho) utterly distraught.
It quickly becomes clear that we’re seeing everything through David’s computer,...
- 6/21/2018
- by Matthew Turner
- Nerdly
The new trailer for Aneesh Chaganty’s innovative, award-winning Sundance thriller Searching is filled with Internet hysteria as a man tries desperately to find his missing daughter via social media channels and websites. And from the looks of the trailer above, things go off the rails.
Written by Chaganty and Sev Ohanian, the film stars John Cho as David Kim, who starts to go down an Internet rabbit hole when his 16-year-old daughter (Michelle La) goes missing. A local investigation is opened and a detective is assigned to the case, but 37 hours later and without a single lead, David decides to search his daughter’s laptop. It opens a Pandora’s box of clues, truths and secrets that might or might not lead him to his daughter. The thriller also stars Debra Messing, Joseph Lee and Sara Sohn.
In a hyper-modern thriller told via a computer screen, smartphones, YouTube, Facebook,...
Written by Chaganty and Sev Ohanian, the film stars John Cho as David Kim, who starts to go down an Internet rabbit hole when his 16-year-old daughter (Michelle La) goes missing. A local investigation is opened and a detective is assigned to the case, but 37 hours later and without a single lead, David decides to search his daughter’s laptop. It opens a Pandora’s box of clues, truths and secrets that might or might not lead him to his daughter. The thriller also stars Debra Messing, Joseph Lee and Sara Sohn.
In a hyper-modern thriller told via a computer screen, smartphones, YouTube, Facebook,...
- 6/18/2018
- by Dino-Ray Ramos
- Deadline Film + TV
As technology has infiltrated every aspect of modern living, a number of films have attempted to integrate its influence into their storytelling methods. However, few have gone beyond mastering the basics, like making an on-screen text message look believable. In 2015, the horror outing “Unfriended” took the idea to a new level: the entire feature takes place on a laptop screen and plays off the weird interconnectivity that allows cyber-stalking – in this case, seemingly from beyond the grave – to seep into “real life.” Aneesh Chaganty’s “Search” similarly blends storytelling with theme, but the final result is something far more inspiring, one that reaches way beyond its initial gimmick to deliver an engrossing ride.
Read More:The 2018 IndieWire Sundance Bible: Every Review, Interview, and News Item Posted During the Festival
“Search” opens with the familiar sound of a dial up connection, using its opening minutes to introduce its audience to the Kim family,...
Read More:The 2018 IndieWire Sundance Bible: Every Review, Interview, and News Item Posted During the Festival
“Search” opens with the familiar sound of a dial up connection, using its opening minutes to introduce its audience to the Kim family,...
- 1/27/2018
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
There have been a few movies set on a computer screen before. Unfriended and Open Windows made it work but Search is the first movie where you don’t even notice it’s all on a computer screen. It’s just so organic to the way we use devices that it just feels like a regular movie, and it’s an awesome thriller. David Kim (John Cho) is a single dad to Margot (Michelle La) since his wife Pam (Sara Sohn) died of cancer. Even the family tragedy is established with a mundane calendar app. When Margot goes missing, David begins a frantic search...read more...
- 1/23/2018
- by Fred Topel
- Monsters and Critics
Showtime announced today that filming has finished on David Lynch and Mark Frost’s Twin Peaks revival series. Ahead of its 2017 premiere, the series’ complete cast—including returning actors as well as those who are new to the series—has been revealed.
Newcomers to the series include Monica Bellucci, Jim Belushi, Michael Cera, Jeremy Davies, Laura Dern, Sky Ferreira, Robert Forster, Meg Foster, Ashley Judd, David Koechner, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Matthew Lillard, Derek Mears, Sara Paxton, Ernie Hudson, Naomi Watts, Trent Reznor, The Walking Dead‘s Josh McDermitt, and many more.
Returning actors include Kyle MacLachlan, Ray Wise, Harry Dean Stanton, Alicia Witt, and more. Below, we have the official press release and full cast list:
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA – April 25, 2016 – Principal photography has concluded on the highly-anticipated new Twin Peaks for Showtime. And today, Showtime, David Lynch and Mark Frost are revealing a key piece of the mystery:...
Newcomers to the series include Monica Bellucci, Jim Belushi, Michael Cera, Jeremy Davies, Laura Dern, Sky Ferreira, Robert Forster, Meg Foster, Ashley Judd, David Koechner, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Matthew Lillard, Derek Mears, Sara Paxton, Ernie Hudson, Naomi Watts, Trent Reznor, The Walking Dead‘s Josh McDermitt, and many more.
Returning actors include Kyle MacLachlan, Ray Wise, Harry Dean Stanton, Alicia Witt, and more. Below, we have the official press release and full cast list:
Press Release: Los Angeles, CA – April 25, 2016 – Principal photography has concluded on the highly-anticipated new Twin Peaks for Showtime. And today, Showtime, David Lynch and Mark Frost are revealing a key piece of the mystery:...
- 4/25/2016
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Showtime revealed the full cast list for its upcoming "Twin Peaks" revival, and it's nothing short of insane -- and insanely long.
The ensemble includes a whopping 217 actors -- yes, you read that right -- and amid all the returning faces, there are also a bunch of surprising, big-name newbies along for the ride this time around. (We've embedded the entire list at the end of this post.)
Original cast members that will be back include many previously-announced people, and the ensemble will feature the likes of Kyle MacLachlan, Sherilyn Fenn, Madchen Amick, Sheryl Lee, Dana Ashbrook, David Duchovny, Miguel Ferrer, Grace Zabriskie, Peggy Lipton, Ray Wise, Wendy Robie, Russ Tamblyn, and Catherine E. Coulson, among many others.
As for the newcomers, some of the bold names that stand out include Monica Bellucci, Jim Belushi, Michael Cera, Laura Dern, Jay R. Ferguson (a.k.a. Stan from "Mad Men"), Ernie Hudson ("Ghostbusters"), Ashley Judd,...
The ensemble includes a whopping 217 actors -- yes, you read that right -- and amid all the returning faces, there are also a bunch of surprising, big-name newbies along for the ride this time around. (We've embedded the entire list at the end of this post.)
Original cast members that will be back include many previously-announced people, and the ensemble will feature the likes of Kyle MacLachlan, Sherilyn Fenn, Madchen Amick, Sheryl Lee, Dana Ashbrook, David Duchovny, Miguel Ferrer, Grace Zabriskie, Peggy Lipton, Ray Wise, Wendy Robie, Russ Tamblyn, and Catherine E. Coulson, among many others.
As for the newcomers, some of the bold names that stand out include Monica Bellucci, Jim Belushi, Michael Cera, Laura Dern, Jay R. Ferguson (a.k.a. Stan from "Mad Men"), Ernie Hudson ("Ghostbusters"), Ashley Judd,...
- 4/25/2016
- by Katie Roberts
- Moviefone
The new "Twin Peaks" isn't slated to debut on Showtime until 2017, but a flurry of speculation about it happened last week with a tweet from Go For Locations indicating that filming had wrapped on the "first two seasons" of the series.
The episode count for the David Lynch-directed series was always in question, but that tweet suggested we'd be getting even more episodes than originally planned. Said tweet has since been deleted, so we'll have to wait to see how that pans out.
in the meantime in more official news, Showtime, Lynch and Mark Frost has released the official cast list for the new series with a whopping 217 names across the various episodes - a list that includes some real surprise big name inclusions such as Monica Bellucci, Michael Cera, Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Eddie Vedder, Ashley Judd, Ernie Hudson, Jim Belushi, Richard Chamberlain, Laura Dern,...
The episode count for the David Lynch-directed series was always in question, but that tweet suggested we'd be getting even more episodes than originally planned. Said tweet has since been deleted, so we'll have to wait to see how that pans out.
in the meantime in more official news, Showtime, Lynch and Mark Frost has released the official cast list for the new series with a whopping 217 names across the various episodes - a list that includes some real surprise big name inclusions such as Monica Bellucci, Michael Cera, Naomi Watts, Tim Roth, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Eddie Vedder, Ashley Judd, Ernie Hudson, Jim Belushi, Richard Chamberlain, Laura Dern,...
- 4/25/2016
- by Garth Franklin
- Dark Horizons
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