Trauma can take people to dark places, sometimes at the cost of everything they hold dear. This is the central theme of Sharp Corner, a film starring Cobie Smulders and Ben Foster, which premiered at ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. To watch “Sharp Corner” feels akin to witnessing a car crash in slow motion. There’s a bleak inevitability to the proceedings and ...
Obsession has always provided ripe fodder for thrillers. Just look at some of Alfred Hitchcock’s most famous features like Vertigo and Rear Window. That phenomenon has gripped Sharp Corner lead Josh ...
Liam Gaughan is a film and TV writer at Collider. He has been writing film reviews and news coverage for ten years. Between relentlessly adding new titles to his watchlist and attending as many ...
EXCLUSIVE: Vertical has acquired U.S. rights to Sharp Corner, an indie psychological thriller, starring Ben Foster (Hell or High Water) and Cobie Smulders (How I Met Your Mother), which scored ...
‘Sharp Corner’ follows one man’s obsession with saving the people who repeatedly crash their cars into his front yard. Not everyone is equipped to respond during an emergency. Besides not having the ...
While the halls of the multiplex are filled with the sounds of battling superheroes and video game icons and even some 1930s bloodsuckers, here comes a film that “identifies” as a thriller, though ...
TIFF: The actor goes to some harrowing places in Jason Buxton's atmospheric Nova Scotia thriller. The “crisis of masculinity” is the thinkpiece fodder of our time. But because those think pieces tend ...
For a film inspired by a Canadian short story, directed by a Canadian filmmaker, and filmed on location in Nova Scotia, it's more than appropriate, after twelve long years, for co-writer/director ...
We gave you a first look at this release earlier in the week but here’s your first trailer for U.S. digital-bound Sharp Corner with Ben Foster and Cobie Smulders, landing there in May. Sharp Corner ...
To watch Jason Buxton's "Sharp Corner" feels akin to witnessing a car crash in slow-motion. There's a bleak inevitability to the proceedings and a cruel voyeuristic streak to how we're called to not ...