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https://stream-flick.com/16640.html?utm_source=form_run: https://stream-flick.com./16640.html?utm_source=form_run https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1193265034836602880/HtFvk7nG_normal.jpg Reporter Zachary Marquez: https://twitter.com/BurningExeter Bio 19. Aspiring filmmaker who's a fan of a lot of things. NSFWs are not allowed here. Brittany O'Grady Director - Sophia Takal USA Thriller 4391 Votes Release date - 2019. The second person to comment. Merry Christmas everyone and happy holidays 🎅🎅. 全:ワン!ワン!ツー!ツー!ワン!ワン!ツー!. @elijserenade Will look out for it. What a waste of time. My god! They took every liberal feminist cliche/meme and made this horrible movie. The memes are much more entertaining👌🏻 Horror is my favorite genre of film and this movie does not deserve to be in the horror category. Although it was a horror to watch. This movie gets a big fat fart noise and 2 👎🏻👎🏻 Hustlers was even more tolerable than this and I walked out of that one. はあ!?今の俺ガードしたろ!!. Olivias preformance here is truly amazing. Merry Christmas Brandon and random people scrolling through the comments. ねえ何時? 気がつけばもう3時. Black Christmas Theatrical release poster Directed by Sophia Takal Produced by Jason Blum Ben Cosgrove Adam Hendricks Screenplay by Sophia Takal April Wolfe Based on Black Christmas by A. Roy Moore Starring Imogen Poots Lily Donoghue Aleyse Shannon Brittany O'Grady Caleb Eberhardt Cary Elwes Music by Will Blair Brooke Blair Cinematography Mark Schwartzbard [1] Edited by Jeff Betancourt Production company Blumhouse Productions Divide/Conquer Distributed by Universal Pictures Release date December 13, 2019 (United States) Running time 92 minutes [2] Country United States [3] Language English Budget $5 million [4] Box office $18. 5 million [5] [6] Black Christmas is a 2019 American slasher film, directed by Sophia Takal, and written by Takal and April Wolfe. [7] [8] Part of the Black Christmas series, it is the loose second remake of the 1974 Canadian film Black Christmas, after the 2006 film, and follows a group of sorority sisters at Hawthorne College as they are preyed upon by an unknown stalker. The film stars Imogen Poots, Aleyse Shannon, Lily Donoghue, Brittany O'Grady, Caleb Eberhardt, and Cary Elwes. [9] [10] Development of the project began in June 2019, when Jason Blum announced that he would produce the film through his studio Blumhouse Productions. On the same day, Sophia Takal was announced as director and co-writer, and principal photography began soon after, lasting for 27 days in New Zealand. Black Christmas was released in North American theaters on December 13, 2019 by Universal Pictures, coinciding with Friday the 13th. [11] It received mixed reviews from critics and has grossed $18. 5 million worldwide. Plot [ edit] While walking home, Hawthorne College student Lindsey is impaled with an icicle by a trio of masked figures. The rest of Hawthorne College is preparing for the Christmas holiday break. Riley Stone, a student at the College's MKE sorority, is still struggling to move on from being raped by AKO fraternity president Brian Huntley (which no one besides her close friends believed her about despite Brian being forced to leave). Her sorority sisters Kris, Marty, Jesse, and Helena are taking part in the AKO talent show with a dance choreographed by Riley. Riley gives Helena her lucky comb. Meanwhile, Kris has drawn the ire of the AKO fraternity and Riley and Marty's lecturer Professor Gelson following a petition from her requesting that university founder and notorious misogynist Calvin Hawthorne's bust be moved away from the main building and another requesting Gelson be fired due to his refusal to teach books written by women. While at her job at a coffee shop, Riley learns that Brian will be back in town to oversee the talent show. She also meets Landon, a friendly boy from the AKO fraternity who takes a liking to her. The group arrives at the AKO fraternity where Riley catches a glimpse of a strange ritual involving new pledges for AKO and a black goo leaking out of the Calvin Hawthorne bust. She also stumbles across Helena about to be sexually assaulted by one of the frat boys. Riley intervenes and sends a tipsy Helena home. Riley takes Helena's place in the talent show and upon seeing Brian in the crowd, performs a song with her sorority sisters blasting the rape culture at the fraternity and stating that Brian did rape Riley. The girls leave in high spirits and Riley bonds with Landon. Meanwhile, back at the MKE house, Helena is abducted by Lindsey's attacker. The next day the girls start to receive threatening DMs from a Calvin Hawthorne account similar to what Lindsey had received before she was murdered. Meanwhile, sorority sister Fran is also killed by the masked man. Concerned that Helena has seemingly not gone home to her parents as planned, Riley alerts campus security who are apathetic and assume Helena has run off with a boyfriend. After a strange encounter with Gelson outside the AKO fraternity, where she finds a list of the MKE girls among some papers he dropped, Riley returns home. Marty and her boyfriend Nate have an argument and she kicks him out of the house that night while Riley and Kris argue over Kris' uploading the talent show video online and Riley now fears retaliation from members of the fraternity. Jesse goes to the attic to get some Christmas lights and is murdered, her body left in the attic. Riley, Kris, and Marty receive more threatening messages before being attacked by a bow-wielding assailant who injures Marty. The girls lock themselves in a room and Riley ventures out to retrieve her phone. Meanwhile, Kris goes to the attic to warn Jesse and discovers her body. Nate arrives back at the house looking to apologize and is promptly murdered. Riley then uses Nate's car keys to kill the masked man. She reunites with Kris and Marty and they are attacked by two other masked men. Marty is gravely wounded but manages to buy Riley and Kris enough time to hide in the kitchen before dying. The pair overpower and kill the attacker. They remove his mask after being alarmed that they are covered in black goo instead of blood. Riley identifies him as an AKO pledge she saw at the ritual and is alarmed by a strange look in the pledge's eyes. The pair escape the house in Nate's car and Riley theorizes that Hawthorne, who was known for dabbling in black magic, is responsible for the killings via his bust and the black goo it emitted. Kris shoots down the idea and suggests they go to the police but Riley demands they go to the AKO fraternity to fight. They argue and Riley heads off to confront the frat herself. She encounters Landon and enlists him to help her enter the fraternity. Meanwhile, Kris stumbles across Lindsey's sorority, which had angered AKO for not wanting to take part in the talent show. She discovers Lindsey's sorority sisters are also being attacked by other AKO pledges and manages to rescue them. At the AKO house, Riley and Landon break in, but Landon is cornered by the frat brothers who convince him to be a pledge. Riley witnesses the Hawthrone bust leak the black goo before discovering Helena, who is tied up but still alive. Attempting to rescue Helena, Riley unties the bonds securing Helena's hands behind her back but is suddenly knocked unconscious by an AKO member. Riley awakens to find herself sitting tied up on a chair. She is confronted by Gelson, Brian, and the AKO frat boys who have inducted Landon as a pledge. Gelson explained that after Kris forced the bust's relocation to the fraternity they discovered Hawthorne's plan, involving a spell and the black goo, to keep unruly women in check. The goo allows the spirit of Hawthorne to possess the fraternity's pledges and send them out to murder any women that stepped out of line. It is also revealed that Helena has been secretly working with the fraternity and stole several items from her sisters that allowed the possessed pledges to easily locate their targets. One of the pledges murders Helena despite her willingness to be a "good woman" to the frat as a show of power to Riley. Brian forces Riley to bow to him, but she plans to attack him; at the same moment Kris and Lindsey's surviving sorority sisters enter and fight the fraternity. Riley overpowers and kills Brian. She then smashes the Hawthorne bust. Kris sets Gelson on fire and the women and Landon escape, locking the frat brothers inside and leaving them to burn to death. As the traumatized group watch the frat house burn, Riley watches with newfound bravery. In a post-credit scene, the cat that was the MKE sisters' pet is seen licking the black liquid. Cast [ edit] Imogen Poots as Riley Stone [12] Aleyse Shannon as Kris Waterson Lily Donoghue as Marty Coolidge Brittany O'Grady as Jesse "Jess" Bradford [13] Caleb Eberhardt as Landon Cary Elwes as Professor Gelson Madeleine Adams as Helena Ritterhouse Ben Black as Phil McIllaney Simon Mead as Nate Nathalie Morris as Fran Abrams Zoë Robins as Oona Ryan McIntyre as Brian Huntley Mark Neilson as Gil Lucy Currey as Lindsey Helms Production [ edit] In June 2019, it was announced that Jason Blum would produce a remake of the 1974 film Black Christmas through his studio Blumhouse Productions, alongside Adam Hendricks from the studio Divide/Conquer, and Ben Cosgrove. [14] In addition, Greg Gilreath and Zac Locke, also from Divide/Conquer, served as executive producers for the project. [15] Also, in June, Sophia Takal was announced as the film's director, having previously worked with Blum on his Into the Dark series for Hulu, [16] while Imogen Poots, Aleyse Shannon, Brittany O'Grady, Lily Donoghue, and Caleb Eberhardt were cast in the starring roles. [17] [18] Also that month, Cary Elwes was added to the cast. [19] Director Takal worked extensively to make this vision of Black Christmas as feminist as she could, stating in an interview, "I wanted to make a movie where instead of feeling objectified or watched from a distance, the audience felt seen. " [20] It is the first Black Christmas film in which Bob Clark was not involved in the production process, as Clark had died in 2007. [21] Bob Clark had produced and directed the original Black Christmas (1974), and had been an executive producer on the 2006 remake of the same name. Unlike the previous two version of Black Christmas, the remake was rated PG-13 by the MPAA, a rating Takal sought in hopes of making it accessible to new audiences, especially young women who were interested in horror, and opening up discussions on major issues like sexual assault, [22] although she was ready to fully commit to utilizing the higher R rating if the ratings board would not grant it. However, she would not use the PG-13 rating to water down the film's violence to a large degree, making it only slightly less violent than the original film. [23] Production began in New Zealand on June 23, 2019. [24] [25] [26] Principal photography occurred for 27 days around Dunedin and Oamaru, with the University of Otago providing the setting. [27] Filming concluded on July 31, 2019. [28] [29] Release [ edit] In the United States and Canada, Black Christmas was released on December 13, 2019, coinciding with Friday the 13th. [30] Reception [ edit] Box office [ edit] As of January 5, 2020, Black Christmas has grossed $10. 4 million in the United States and Canada, and $8. 1 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $18. 5 million. [5] In the United States, the film was released alongside Jumanji: The Next Level, and Richard Jewell, and was initially projected to gross $10–12 million from 2, 100 theaters in its opening weekend. [31] However after making $1. 4 million on its first day (including $230, 000 from Thursday night previews), estimates for the film were lowered to $4. It ended up debuting to just $4. 2 million, finishing fifth at the box office. [32] The film fell 57% to $1. 8 million in its second weekend, finishing in tenth. [33] Critical response [ edit] This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. ( January 2020) Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an approval rating of 40%, based on 96 reviews, with an average rating of 4. 45/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Better than the 2006 remake yet not as sharp as the original, this Black Christmas stabs at timely feminist themes but mostly hits on familiar pulp. " [34] Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 49 out of 100 based on 25 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews. " [35] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "D+" on an A+ to F scale, while those at PostTrak gave it an "awful" average 1. 5 out of 5 stars, with 38% saying they would definitely recommend it. [32] References [ edit] ^ "Black Christmas (2019)".. Retrieved August 9, 2019. ^ "BLACK CHRISTMAS (2019)". British Board of Film Classification. ^ Kroll, Justin; Kroll, Justin (June 13, 2019). "Blumhouse Remaking Cult Hit 'Black Christmas' With Imogen Poots Set to Star". Variety. Retrieved November 28, 2019. ^ Mendelson, Scott (November 27, 2019). "Box Office: How Will 'Cats' And 'Black Christmas' Fare Against 'Star Wars' And 'Jumanji'? ". Forbes. Retrieved November 29, 2019. ^ a b "Black Christmas (2019)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved January 5, 2020. ^ "Black Christmas (2019)". The Numbers. Retrieved January 5, 2020. ^ Erbland, Kate (June 13, 2019). " ' Black Christmas' Remake: Blumhouse Taps Sophia Takal to Direct Remake of 1974 Slasher". IndieWire. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Han, Karen (June 13, 2019). "A Black Christmas remake is coming this year from the team behind Halloween". Polygon. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Boucher, Geoff (June 13, 2019). " ' Black Christmas': Sophia Takal Set To Direct Blumhouse Remake Of 1974 Slasher". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved June 16, 2019. ^ Collis, Clark (June 13, 2019). "Imogen Poots to star in Blumhouse remake of horror classic Black Christmas". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Mendelson, Scott (June 13, 2019). "Blumhouse's 'Black Christmas' Remake Gets Doubly Appropriate Release Date". Retrieved June 16, 2019. ^ Verhoeven, Beatrice (June 13, 2019). "Imogen Poots to Star in 'Black Christmas' Remake for Blumhouse, Universal". TheWrap. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Millicanon, Josh (June 13, 2019). "Surprise! Blumhouse Releasing BLACK CHRISTMAS Remake This December! ". Dread Central. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Kennedy, Michael (June 13, 2019). "Blumhouse Announces Black Christmas Remake, Sets 2019 Release Date". Screen Rant. Retrieved July 11, 2019. ^ Sneider, Jeff (June 13, 2019). "Blumhouse to Remake 'Black Christmas' with Director Sophia Takal". Collider. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Rife, Katie (June 13, 2019). "Blumhouse announces Black Christmas remake directed by Sophia Takal". The A. V. Club. Retrieved August 9, 2019. ^ Kroll, Justin (June 13, 2019). Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Squires, John (June 13, 2019). "Poster: Blumhouse is Remaking 'Black Christmas' and It's Coming to Theaters THIS December! ". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Evangelista, Chris (June 20, 2019). "Blumhouse 'Black Christmas' Remake Cast Adds Cary Elwes". /Film. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Page, Aubrey (December 13, 2019). "How 'Black Christmas' Takes Dead Aim At The Patriarchy". Huffington Post. Retrieved January 18, 2020. ^ " ' A Christmas Story' director dies in crash". Los Angeles Times. April 5, 2007. Archived from the original on April 6, 2007. Retrieved January 19, 2020. ^ Kennedy, Michael (December 20, 2019). "Why Black Christmas Isn't Rated R". Retrieved January 11, 2020. ^ Bibbiani, William (December 13, 2019). " ' Black Christmas': Sophia Takal Sets the Record Straight About the Film's PG-13 Rating [Interview]". Retrieved January 11, 2020. ^ Squires, John (July 18, 2019). "Behind the Scenes Images from Blumhouse's Remake Bring 'Black Christmas' in July". Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Miller, Tim (June 24, 2019). "Extremely localised snow hits Dunedin". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved July 2, 2019. ^ Hendricks, Adam (June 23, 2019). "Day 1! #blackchristmas". Retrieved August 8, 2019 – via Instagram. ^ Miller, Tim (June 19, 2019). "Dunedin to feature in horror film". Retrieved July 2, 2019. ^ MacLean, Hamish (August 3, 2019). " ' Black Christmas' filming wraps up". Retrieved August 4, 2019. ^ Hendricks, Adam (July 31, 2019). "Day 27! #blackchristmas". Retrieved August 8, 2019 – via Instagram. ^ El-Mahmoud, Sarah (June 14, 2019). "Blumhouse Is Remaking Black Christmas".. Retrieved August 8, 2019. ^ Rubin, Rebecca (December 11, 2019). "Can 'Jumanji' Sequel Achieve Next-Level Box Office Success? ". Retrieved December 12, 2019. ^ a b D'Alessandro, Anthony (December 14, 2019). " ' Jumanji: The Next Level' Advancing To $51M+ Opening; 'Richard Jewell' & 'Black Christmas' Earn Lumps Of Coal". Retrieved December 14, 2019. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (December 22, 2019). " ' Star Wars: Rise Of Skywalker' Force Grips 3rd Best December Opening With $193M+; Drat Those 'Cats' $7. 6M, 'Bombshell' $5. 8M – Saturday AM Early Update". Retrieved December 22, 2019. ^ "Black Christmas (2019)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 17, 2020. ^ "Black Christmas (2019) Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved January 21, 2020. External links [ edit] Official website Black Christmas on IMDb Black Christmas at Rotten Tomatoes. You know, I'm surprised you didn't mention the rather troubled production of this film. Mainly how the studio insisted on adding the more bloody and brutal kills and that originally, the creator behind the original Black Christmas gave his blessings to the project. Never heard of this one, seems like a really underrated classic. Just wanted to go to see it, i ask me how bad can it be? I just ignore the comments here but. omg! The first part of the movie is the most stupid and boring thing ever. br> Sad but from the conversations until the camera movements and the direction, really bad. The second part was really better and finally a little bit action but it was just with no point and no sense. Save your money and time. P.s. I gave 3 just because of the second part. Movies, showtimes, trailers and more! Popcorn... The coolest movie app in town! Find Singapore movie showtimes, watch trailers and book tickets at your favourite cinemas, covering Cathay, Golden Village and Shaw cinemas. "Popcorn movie app blows away the competition... If you watch movies regularly, forget the other apps. Popcorn is the only app you'll need. " -. Sophia Takal’s film isn’t particularly scary, but it has plenty on its mind. Credit... Kirsty Griffin/Universal Pictures Black Christmas Directed by Sophia Takal Horror, Mystery, Thriller PG-13 1h 32m More Information If all you wanted for Christmas was a smarter “Black Christmas, ” you are in luck. The director Sophia Takal, who wrote the screenplay with the film critic April Wolfe, has taken the 1974 Canadian sorority slasher standard — remade once before, in 2006 — and run with it, emerging with a movie significantly different in style and tone from its source. This “Black Christmas” speaks to an era of campus curriculum debates and a national reckoning over the reporting of sexual assault. (Takal says she drew inspiration from the Kavanaugh hearings. ) Instead of prank phone calls, it has strangers sliding into your direct messages. The bustle of activity mitigates a central implausibility of earlier versions, whose characters seemed slow to notice the missing women. The sorority’s sisters are preparing for a talent show at which they plan to call out a graduated frat boy who raped the heroine, Riley (Imogen Poots), and escaped punishment. (This time, the police’s hand-waving of complaints is not portrayed as funny. ) Kris (Aleyse Shannon) is circulating a petition against a plummy professor (Cary Elwes) who favors white male authors. Some of the new ideas are silly. Bows and arrows are tough to make look scary onscreen, and a supernatural element — the college’s founder dabbled in the dark arts — undermines the movie’s grounding in the here and now. But if the 2019 “Black Christmas” is not nearly as chilling as the original, it is genuinely barbed as gender satire, and it cleverly pre-empts obvious outrage. Horrified men may consider that its assessment is no more damning than that of “The Stepford Wives, ” a male creation. They might also ponder that they are now forced to answer for self-appointed defenders of the “masculine spirit” like the Canadian academic Jordan Peterson, at whose worldview this “Black Christmas” takes implicit aim. Black Christmas Rated PG-13. Less gore than expected. Running time: 1 hour 32 minutes. OH wrong movie I thought this was leterG dna lesnaH. If youre going to upload movies make sure its done right. It sounds tinnish and awful like you taped it from your cell phone. I wont watch nothing you upload if it sounds terrible like this. | Simon Abrams December 13, 2019 [Full disclosure: I’m friends with co-writer April Wolfe and have previously worked with her for Voice Media Group] Led by writer/director Sophia Takal (“ Always Shine, ” “Into the Dark: New Year, New You”) and co-writer April Wolfe, “Black Christmas” is a PG-13 horror film for general audiences—it never really needed to be R-rated, especially since the 2006 “Black Christmas” remake is gory enough for two movies—that follows realistic characters who are trapped in a genuinely disturbing situation. So while not everything works in “Black Christmas, ” the stuff that does is ultimately what matters most. Advertisement Mu Kappa Epsilon sister Riley ( Imogen Poots) receives mysterious, threatening private messages on her smartphone. For some reason, she doesn’t instantly block the messenger, who claims to be Calvin Hawthorne, her slave-owning college’s founder. But as you might imagine, the real danger to Riley comes from the community of men who support (tacitly or directly) her cyber-stalker. Soon enough, Riley and her fellow sorority members, like Kris ( Aleyse Shannon) and Marty ( Lily Donoghue), are physically attacked by a cabal of masked men. There’s never any doubt as to who these men are: frat guys from Delta Kappa Omicron, whose former president Brian (Ryan McIntire) sexually assaulted Riley, but they, of course, don’t believe her. Still, knowing who’s behind the masks—not to mention the “ Eyes Wide Shut ”-inspired masks that these creeps wear—only serve to enhance the movie’s viscerally upsetting stalk-and-slash scenes. But that’s part of what makes this year’s “Black Christmas” not only immediately satisfying, but also a fitting companion to the bleak 1974 “Black Christmas, ” another horror movie where young women are targeted and picked off by a deranged killer. Fear of women is the thematic tie that binds these two slashers, though the new “Black Christmas” is understandably more focused on how women are met with resistance whenever they accuse men of complicity and wrong-doing. Takal and Wolfe make it hard to dismiss Riley’s feelings of exasperation and panic by juxtaposing her hopeless interactions with Gil (Mark Neilson), a believably uncooperative security guard, and Professor Gelson ( Cary Elwes), a condescending frat sponsor, with the sudden and periodic dispatch of Riley’s fellow MKE members. During the middle portion of “Black Christmas, ” we see a group of women trapped by macho hostility and indifference. This is the unnerving part of the movie, the part where a believable conspiracy, fostered by gross pride, takes shape. We see the plot against Riley and her friends everywhere: in the portrait of Brian that hangs in his frat’s hallway; in the childishly defensive way that Gil responds to Riley when she asks him to help her find one of her missing friends (mayonnaise has never looked so gross); in Gelson’s passive-aggressive dismissal of Riley’s accusations (made that much more credible by the way he conflates his mistrust of Riley with his nostalgia for Hawthorne); and in a quietly upsetting argument between Riley and Kris that’s full of bitter, self-flagellating accusations about who’s to blame for their present dilemma. Takal, Wolfe, and their generally strong ensemble cast (especially Poots) effectively drew me into the minds of Riley and her friends, a group of realistic characters who are messy and frightened without being diminished or condemned for their anger and insecurities. I wasn’t as enamored with any scene that revolves around threatening DMs or Landon ( Caleb Eberhardt), Riley’s nebbish-y, nice guy love interest (his aw-shucks, millennial Clark Kent mannerisms do nothing for me). There’s also an underwhelming supernatural explanation for the fraternity-related violence that Riley and her friends are subjected to, which isn’t really a spoiler, since a “supernatural” connection is explicitly suggested at the beginning of the film, which starts with a quote about Hawthorne students’ special talents. These scenes may open "Black Christmas" up to a wider audience, but they’re also distracting and don’t really complement the devastating mood of the movie’s best scenes, most of which are grounded in Riley and her friends’ lived-in stress. So while none of the film's more unbelievable plot elements are necessarily wrong-headed, they do feel tacked on in ways that the rest of “Black Christmas” does not. Thankfully, Takal and Wolfe’s remake mostly feels personal and urgent thanks to some atmospheric scare scenes and some sharp dialogue that reflect the world outside the movie theater in ways that most other studio-distributed horror films don’t. I hope there’s a lot more where “Black Christmas” came from. Reveal Comments comments powered by. It's one of the worst horror movies I've ever seen! The characters are annoying, the story is really different than the original, and the whole concept about how all women are good and all men are bad is really stupid (that's not feminism because feminism is about gender equality, and we all know there are good men and good women as well there are bad men and bad women. I would hate even if they wrote an opposite story about good men killing bad women because both ways are so generic, boring and wrong. I advise you to save your money and watch the original or the remake (yes, that one looks a masterpiece if compared with this new version. And even the female characters are more interesting and iconic than the new ones. This was an awful trailer. legit I feel like I saw the whole film already. Lovely - 1980th - STILE! MORE BLODY MESS - MORE EXCITMENT MORE - and more fashionable STILE! POPS. As much as I LOVEEEEE Christian keys, I still couldn't help myself, had to read the comments before watching lol 🙈💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖. The shot of Billy's eye peeking through the door is one of my favorite, most memorable parts of this movie 👀👀 pretty creepy.

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