Word: fincher
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Zodiac, a true-crime docudrama from scaremeister David (Se7en) Fincher, is about the manhunt for a killer who raised shivers throughout California from 1969 to 1978. He murdered at least five people and maybe many more. Or perhaps other disturbed souls copied his style. Often imitated, never duplicated, Zodiac was the Elvis of serial killers: he had brains, swagger, originality and a flawless sense of p.r. He taunted police and the press with phone calls, coded messages, swatches of his victims' clothes. Bay Area detectives questioned several suspects, but the killer was never caught. In what may have been...
...became more aggressive, he learned to take, well, minor precautions. “I would open my door with my foot because you know, it gets to you a little bit,” he recounts. “Zodiac,” a new film directed by David Fincher of “Se7en” and “Fight Club” fame, features Academy Award nominee Jake Gyllenhaal in the role of Graysmith. The film chronicles the period between 1969 and 1991, in which the Zodiac Killer murdered an unknown number of men and women...
...David Fincher, director of “Se7en” and “Fight Club,” returns to the big screen with “Zodiac,” a haunting film based on actual murder case files. Fincher’s unique, unsettling style will leave you with your mouth agape, terrified in a way you’ve never been before. The film tells the story of the eponymous, widely publicized serial killer who terrorized the California Bay Area during the 1970’s with a series of random killings, cryptic letters, and puzzling...
...create a community of boutique studios open to innovation? From its inception, the MTV channel has nurtured new movie talent, showcasing short, often experimental films (music videos) by young directors like Michael Bay, Spike Jonze and David Fincher. Their success in features has made MTV, in a way, the true Sundance of mainstream Hollywood...
...tasty mix of hand-to-hand fighting and gunplay, relieved by some smartly scripted role playing and problem solving, but the real pleasure is the stunning graphics: everything looks old and rusty and grungy, as if each frame had been individually hand-distressed and then moodily lit by David Fincher. Vin Diesel plays Riddick with such inimitable heavy-lidded sangfroid, he ought to be in movies. Oh, that's right...