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  1. Find trailers, reviews, synopsis, awards and cast information for Don't Look Now (1973) - Nicolas Roeg on AllMovie - A married couple is haunted by a series of…

  2. Don't Look Now is a leisurely, disquieting, horror film. The director is going to creep you out, and he's going to take his time doing it. You'll see plenty of quiet weirdness in the time between the chills, and you'll likely try to figure out what all the quiet weirdness means.

  3. 11 de feb. de 2015 · Note: The following essay contains spoilers. W hen Nicolas Roeg’s Don’t Look Now was released in Britain in 1973, it was the main feature on a double bill with Robin Hardy’s The Wicker Man. I can still recall emerging from the experience elated and also in something like a state of shock.

  4. www.bfi.org.uk › film › 8c6c178c-b903-5e2b-b480-d43a6b21f5b4Don't Look Now (1973) | BFI

    Don't Look Now (1973) Set in off-season Venice, British director Nicolas Roeg’s tragedy combines an acute study of grief with a supernaturally charged thriller plot, to beautiful and devastating effect. Based on Daphne du Maurier’s short story, Don’t Look Now opens with the death of a child, but the tragedy is that of her parents, John ...

  5. 15 de sept. de 2023 · Don’t Look Now may be classic horror, but its use of horror elements is transfigured in ways that speak more of grief. Rather than a titillating forerunner to on-screen slaughter, its sex is wrapped in grief, affirmation and old-fashioned intimacy. It’s just sex, and then the movie – like life – carries on.

  6. Don't Look Now, conocida en idioma castellano como Venecia rojo shocking en la Argentina y Mexico, Amenaza en la sombra en España, Amenaza en las sombras en el Peru [1] , es un largometraje coproducido por Italia y el Reino Unido en 1973. El guion se basa en un relato corto de Daphne du Maurier, escritora de suspenso que sirvió como inspiración a directores como Alfred Hitchcock.

  7. Don't Look Now (1973) is British director Nicolas Roeg's haunting and classic "shattering" supernatural thriller (his greatest film), and depiction of grief, based upon the 1971 Daphne du Maurier short story tale. The fatalistic and portentious film was advertised as a "psychic" thriller (the film's tagline was cautionary: "Pass the warning.