A director whose breakthrough was
the story of a madman's last stand has exceeded that feat with the story of an angry man's next step.
Never Stop Sneakin» is described as a brand new vision of sneakin'that follows
the story of the madman Amadeus Guildenstern who traveled through time and kidnapped all the U.S. presidents.
Not exact matches
He wrote detective
stories, books about anarchists and
madmen, essays on every conceivable topic, and books
of philosophy and theology.
Forget that Hitler was Christian, it was the
story of Judas in the Bible itself that pushed a
madman to his atrocities.
There's pageantry galore, arranged marriages (as well as doomed extramarital love
stories) and often some sort
of madman near the throne or, in the case
of Danish director Nikolaj Arcel's «A Royal Affair,» actually occupying it.
The
story itself is also true to history, with some acceptable liberties taken for the film: Commodus really was a dangerous
madman, and he really was in the habit
of fighting in the gladiatorial arena.
Anyway, the game tells the
story of a maniacal
madman who wants to rid the land
of delicious Chinese food.
But in this deadly game
of cat and mouse, the stakes are raised with each gruesome slaying as the pair races to catch a
madman before he brings every one
of Poe's shocking
stories to chilling life... and death.
When a
madman begins committing horrific murders inspired by Poe's darkest works, a young Baltimore detective (Luke Evans) joins forces with Poe in a quest to get inside the killer's mind in order to stop him from making every one
of Poe's brutal
stories a blood chilling reality.
There is also a solo campaign that follows the
stories of Jack Cayman and Leonhardt Victorion as they attempt to track down a once - great enforcer
of the peace turned
madman.
Frankly, I can't blame them for being mad, and it sounds like we're on the wrong side
of the fight, but Alex dives in head on, and the
story devolves from there into cliché soldier versus
madman territory.