It's a modest film for those sci - fi connoisseurs who flip out over paranoiac
Cold War flicks about outsiders as dangerous foes.
Not exact matches
While Chad was busy on John Wick 2, David directed the
Cold -
War spy action
flick The
Coldest City with Charlize Theron.
Guillermo Del Toro's The Shape of Water is a fairy tale romance, monster
flick, and
Cold War espionage thriller all rolled into one.
A postmodern
Cold War thriller that pits the Russians against England's MI6, Our Kind of Traitor is like a B - roll James Bond
flick stripped of most of its action set - pieces, yet imbued with a plot and characters more sophisticated than the average 007 fare.
I understand that a
Cold War set
flick should be bleak, but this is a movie without any joy and it affects the audience watching it.
The Wick DNA is probably the most prevalent and that's because David Leitch, who co-directed the first installment of the Keanu assassin franchise, helms this action
flick set at the end of the
Cold War starring Charlize Theron as an MI6 spy.
Released in theaters 40 years ago in October, the super -»70s
flick had a cool title, a killer poster, a score by Jerry Goldsmith, a cast that included George Peppard, Jan - Michael Vincent, Paul Winfield, Jackie Earle Haley, and Dominique Sanda — and the ultimate post-apocalyptic survival vehicle: The Landmaster.It capitalized on
cold -
war fears that nuclear armageddon was right around the corner, and what we'd be left with would be a radioactive wasteland, plagued by bizarre weather patterns and populated by mutated insects and deadly scavengers.The film also had a gimmick: Like BATTLESTAR GALACTICA's limited 1978 theatrical run that was released in «Sensurround,» DAMNATION ALLEY boasted a big - screen release bathed in «Sound 360» — basically full - range stereo speakers turned up to 11 to envelop the viewer and make the seats vibrate (a technique also used for the release of DAMIEN: OMEN II).