Berikut ini sinopsis film The Glass House yang akan tayang Sabtu (19/1/2019) malam ini di Bioskop Trans TV pukul 23.30 WIB
TRIBUNNEWS.COM - Bioskop Trans TV kembali menyuguhkan film menarik untuk menemani akhir pekan Anda.
Film The Glass House dijadwalkan tayang Sabtu (19/1/2019) malam ini pukul 23.30 WIB.
Film ini bergenre thriller misteri psikologis ini menceritakan mengenai kisah dua saudara yang bernama Ruby dan Rhett kehilangan orang tua mereka Dave dan Grace.
Awalnya mereka memiliki sebuah keluarga yang bahadia dan membuat mereka merasa nyaman.
Namun kematian kedua orang tua mereka karena sebuah kecelakaan mengubah segalanya.
Mereka kemudian diasuh oleh tetangga mereka bernama Erin dan Terry Malibu.
Alasannya adalah mereka berdua mendapatkan hak asuh sekaligus tanggung jawab untuk mengasuh kedua saudara tersebut sesuai dengan warisan yang telah ditulis.
Erin dan Terru menjadi orang tua yang baik bagi kedua anak tersebut.
Baca: Sinopsis Film Superman Returns, Tayang di Trans TV Malam Ini Pukul 21.30 WIB
Mereka selalu mewujudkan keinginan Ruby dan Rhett apapun itu.
TRIBUNMANADO.CO.ID - Sinopsis Film The Glass House , Saksikan Malam Ini di Bioskop TransTV Pukul 23.30 WIB!
Bioskop Trans TV kembali menyuguhkan film menarik untuk menemani akhir pekan Anda.
Film The Glass House dijadwalkan tayang Sabtu (19/1/2019) malam ini pukul 23.30 WIB.
Film ini bergenre thriller misteri psikologis ini menceritakan mengenai kisah dua saudara yang bernama Ruby dan Rhett kehilangan orang tua mereka Dave dan Grace.
Awalnya mereka memiliki sebuah keluarga yang bahadia dan membuat mereka merasa nyaman.
Namun kematian kedua orang tua mereka karena sebuah kecelakaan mengubah segalanya.
Mereka kemudian diasuh oleh tetangga mereka bernama Erin dan Terry Malibu.
Alasannya adalah mereka berdua mendapatkan hak asuh sekaligus tanggung jawab untuk mengasuh kedua saudara tersebut sesuai dengan warisan yang telah ditulis.
Erin dan Terru menjadi orang tua yang baik bagi kedua anak tersebut.
Baca: Ramalan Zodiak Minggu 20 Januari 2019: Aquarius Temukan Kebahagiaanmu di Perjalanan Akhir Pekan ini
Mereka selalu mewujudkan keinginan Ruby dan Rhett apapun itu.
Why it’s hot Remember the heady days of 2012, and a country joyously united in celebration of sporting achievement, royal pageantry and our ability to throw a damn good party? If all that cheer and goodwill seems a long time ago, you can find a pleasing reminder at the site of the 2012 Games. Since the athletes departed, the Olympic Park has undergone a slow transformation into a place to live, work and play. It has its own postcode (E20, shared with EastEnders’ fictional Walford), Stratford’s shopping and transport links are on the doorstep — and, as you’d expect, the sports facilities are second to none. It’s a gentle, outdoorsy sort of place, with paths, gardens and riverside walkways.
A new cultural hub, branded the…
This is what happened when Darren Criss met his favorite actor 10:43 AM ET Tue, 8 Jan 2019 | 01:05
With his reputation as a writer-director in shambles, Shyamalan realized that he would have to try and tune out the rampant criticism by listening to his gut and making low-budget, independent horror movie similar to the suspenseful films that helped launch his career.
"This was a time when nobody was calling, nobody wanted to make a film with me," Shyamalan says in the speech. That meant he would have to finance the film himself, so he took out a $5 million loan, putting up his family's house as collateral.
Shyamalan finished a rough cut of the movie and showed it to every Hollywood studio that would meet with him. They all passed. At that point, he says, "I am on the verge of financial collapse. I do not believe in myself."
Despite his disappointment, Shyamalan convinced himself to keep working on his self-financed movie. "I went into the editing room [and] I just made one scene better, just one moment better," Shyamalan says in his speech. He kept working to improve the movie — "I made another moment better and another moment better," he says — and those incremental successes helped him shrug off the weight of his disappointment and Hollywood's criticism of his work.
"I just stopped thinking about selling the movie, I stopped thinking about what was going to happen to me. And, I just got addicted to this feeling of making that next thing better," he says.
Shyamalan showed the edited version of his film to Universal Pictures and the studio bought the rights to distribute the movie and horror film powerhouse Jason Blum's Blumhouse Productions ("Get Out," "The Purge") signed on as the producer. The movie, a found footage horror film called "The Visit," went on to gross nearly $100 million (on a production budget of just $5 million) while receiving mostly positive reviews from critics.
Shyamalan took the money he made from "The Visit" and self-financed his next movie, 2017's "Split," which earned a number of rave reviews and grossed $278 million worldwide on a production budget of just $9 million.
Now, he's releasing "Glass" and industry trackers expect the new film to clear more than $50 million over the holiday weekend — an opening bow that could put it on pace to match last year's popular horror film "A Quiet Place," which grossed over $340 million in total.
Shyamalan believes now that what spurred his career comeback was simply his realization that there are only so many things that each person has control over. For instance, he could not control the reactions of critics, audiences and Hollywood executives to his work, but he could control how hard he worked on his next project and how focused he was on making it better, bit by bit.
"A person who concentrates on what they have power over becomes unlimited in their ability to manifest what they want in the world," Shyamalan told Drexel graduates in his commencement speech.
Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of both Universal Pictures and CNBC.
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