Runaway (1984 film) - Factbites
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Topic: Runaway (1984 film)


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
 Runaway -
Runaway (1984 film), a 1984 film starring Tom Selleck
Runaway (2005 film), a 2005 film starring Aaron Stanford and Robin Tunney
a runaway train, a train which cannot be stopped
psychcentral.com /psypsych/Runaways   (298 words)

  
 product.txt
Building on the show's popularity, Henson produced his first full-length feature film, the successful 1979 release "The Muppet Movie." It was followed by "The Great Muppet Caper" in 1981 and "The Muppets Take Manhattan" in 1984.
On a deeper level, the film captures the time, the dreams and the feelings of a young girl on the edge of womanhood and awareness.
In the film, Sarah falls down a dark shaft.-- whose walls consist of hundreds of hands, all reaching out for her.
www.astrolog.org /labyrnth/product.txt   (6410 words)

  
 Sphere (1998)
But after that point Crichton’s star began to wane - the film adaptation of his best-selling novel The Terminal Man (1974) was barely seen, and his other directorial efforts - Looker (1981), Runaway (1984) and
Both are films about alien contact and human prejudice.
In the 1970s Crichton had a big hit with the film adaption of his novel The Andromeda Strain (1971) and further successes as a director with the likes of Westworld (1973), Coma (1978) and
www.moria.co.nz /sf/sphere.htm   (1365 words)

  
 Runaway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Runaway (movie), a 1984 film starring Tom Selleck
The Runaway Jury, a legal/suspense novel by John Grisham
Runaway evolution, a model of the evolution of sexual selection
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Runaway   (223 words)

  
 John O’Shea and Pacific Films
Only three feature films were produced in that time (Broken Barrier, 1952; Runaway, 1964; Don’t Let It Get You, 1966); all of them by John O’Shea for Pacific Films.
With the upturn in the New Zealand film industry in the 1980s Pacific Films returned to feature film production, releasing Sons for the Return Home (1979), Pictures (1981), Among the Cinders (1984), Leave all Fair (1985), Ngati (1987) and Te Rua (1991).
John O’Shea’s contribution to the New Zealand film industry is indisputable, for more than 50 years he was totally committed to New Zealand filmmaking and film culture.
www.filmarchive.org.nz /archive_presents/pacificfilms/oshea_intro.html   (754 words)

  
 Biography for Jodie Foster
Her first film was Napoleon and Samantha (1972), a Disney outing that cast her as a runaway.
During school vacations, she managed to appear in several features, including Carny (1980), Foxes (1980), and The Hotel New Hampshire (1984), before graduating in 1985.
Foster scored another Best Actress nomination for her portrayal of a backwoodswoman in Nell (1994), the first film made by her own company, Egg Productions.
www.imdb.com /name/nm0000149/bio   (2640 words)

  
 MTV.com - Movies - Alex North
His most popular composition, "Unchained Melody" (for the 1955 prison picture Unchanged), received a whole new lease on life in 1990 thanks to the runaway hit film Ghost.
His first feature-film score was for 20th Century-Fox's The 13th Letter; he followed this with a steady parade of scores for such memorable pictures as Viva Zapata (1952), The Rose Tattoo (1955), The Bad Seed (1956), Spartacus (1960), Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf (1967), Under the Volcano (1984) and Prizzi's Honor (1985).
North's earliest film work consisted of the scores for documentary films, an activity he engaged in from 1937 through the early 1950s.
www.mtv.com /movies/person/92593/bio.jhtml   (236 words)

  
 Ted Strong's Radio Weblog
To be fair, Golan & G were involved in a handful of films that either attempted respectability or received some acclaim in some area: The Company of Wolves (1984), Maria's Lovers (1984), Lifeforce (1985), Runaway Train (1985), Otello (1986), Barfly (1987), Street Smart (1987), and A Cry in the Dark (1988).
Norris had bits in the Dean Martin-Matt Helm film The Wrecking Crew (1969) and Bruce Lee's Enter the Dragon (1973).
The Delta Force was directed by Menahem Golan, written by James Bruner & Menahem Golan, and produced by Yoram Globus & Menahem Golan.
blogs.salon.com /0002212/2003/06/25.html   (473 words)

  
 Sphere (1998)
But after that point Crichton’s star began to wane - the film adaptation of his best-selling novel The Terminal Man (1974) was barely seen, and his other directorial efforts - Looker (1981), Runaway (1984) and
In the 1970s Crichton had a big hit with the film adaption of his novel The Andromeda Strain (1971) and further successes as a director with the likes of Westworld (1973), Coma (1978) and
www.moria.co.nz /sf/sphere.htm   (473 words)

  
 AETN's On the Same Page
His works include the recently released, "Special Kay - The Wisdom of Terry Kay" (Hill Street Press, 2000), "The Kidnapping of Aaron Greene" (William Morrow, 1999), "The Year the Lights Came On" (1976), "After Eli" (1981), "Dark Thirty" (1984), "To Dance With the White Dog" (1990), "Shadow Song" (1995), and "The Runaway" (1997).
He began his journalism career in 1959 at a weekly newspaper in Decatur (GA) and later worked for the Atlanta Journal as a sports writer and, for eight years, as one of America's leading film-theater critics.
Award-winning novelist and screenwriter Terry Kay was born in Hart County, Georgia, the eleventh of twelve children.
www.aetn.org /samepage/ar1.html   (473 words)

  
 Roberts clan includes Eric, Julia
Answer: Eric Roberts, who starred in The Pope of Greenwich Village in 1984 and was nominated for an Oscar in 1985 for Runaway Train, is the older brother of Julia.
He helped his sister out with a part in his film Blood Red (1989), which featured Eric as an Italian immigrant who's harassed by a California big shot.
In 2003, Julia took a small role in a movie starring her look-alike niece Emma Roberts (Eric's daughter), playing "Julia, pregnant ticket taker" in Grand Champion, which is about a prize calf.
www.azcentral.com /arizonarepublic/preview/articles/1007mullercol1007.html   (838 words)

  
 Hector Elizondo
Elizondo has also been a favourite of director Garry Marshall who has cast him in at least 12 of his movies including Pretty Woman (1990), for which Elizondo earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actor; Dear God (1996); The Other Sister (1999); Runaway Bride (1999) and The Princess Diaries (2001).
During the late '60s, Elizondo made his first feature film bow and has been in over 80 movies and TV-movies since.
This bald, gap-toothed character actor has played everything from a Mexican bandit in Valdez Is Coming (1971), a psychopathic killer in The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974), a dogged detective in The Fan (1981), a middle-class family man in The Flamingo Kid (1984), to an incorruptible football coach in Necessary Roughness (1991).
www.tribute.ca /bio.asp?id=3126   (461 words)

  
 Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990)
Gremlins (1984) was a runaway success that became the highest box-office grossing film of its year in many countries.
After they drink experimental potions in the lab, these are transformed into an alarming array of strange and exotic creatures that proceed to wreak havoc throughout the tower.
It adds a few inventive twists and ups the scale of things, introducing more technically elaborate and a wilder variety of gremlins, but never really manages to disguise this single fact.
www.moria.co.nz /fantasy/gremlins2.htm   (461 words)

  
 BrothersJudd Blog
Answer: Eric Roberts, who starred in The Pope of Greenwich Village in 1984 and was nominated for an Oscar in 1985 for Runaway Train, is the older brother of Julia.
He helped his sister out with a part in his film Blood Red (1989), which featured Eric as an Italian immigrant who's harassed by a California big shot.
One of the longest and most detailed studies of UK childcare has concluded that young children who are looked after by their mothers do significantly better in developmental tests than those cared for in nurseries, by childminders or relatives.
www.brothersjudd.com /blog   (461 words)

  
 Sphere (1998)
But after that point Crichton’s star began to wane - the film adaptation of his best-selling novel The Terminal Man (1974) was barely seen, and his other directorial efforts - Looker (1981), Runaway (1984) and
Crichton’s novels are fine for the scientific extrapolation and the depth of research Crichton places into them, but when it comes to characters Crichton is utterly flat.
In it Crichton seemed undecided whether he was telling an alien contact story or a monsters from the id drama, and the ending where the protagonists simply wished the problem away was so absurd I threw the book across the room in frustration.
www.moria.co.nz /sf/sphere.htm   (461 words)

  
 Sphere (1998)
But after that point Michael Crichton’s star began to wane - the film adaptation of his best-selling novel The Terminal Man (1974) was barely seen, and his other directorial efforts - Looker (1981), Runaway (1984) and
Michael Crichton’s novels are fine for the scientific extrapolation and the depth of research Crichton places into them, but when it comes to characters Crichton is utterly flat.
In it Crichton seemed undecided whether he was telling an alien contact story or a monsters from the id drama, and the ending where the protagonists simply wished the problem away was so absurd I threw the book across the room in frustration.
www.moria.co.nz /sf/sphere.htm   (1407 words)

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