Synonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Synonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
Antonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Antonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
From his frequent collaborations with Guillermo del Toro to his creepy characters on television shows such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Doug Jones is not a stranger to playing a creature.
Source: https://screenrant.com/renfield-dark-universe-reboot-frankenstein-wolf-man-monsters-fancasting/
His 2020 horror film felt cut from the same cloth with a healthy dollop of Tobe Hooper's back from development hell after the much more promising iteration written and directed by Guillermo del Toro tragically folded.
I’m right there with Guillermo del Toro on this one.
In first approaching Netflix’s new Cabinet of Curiosities, it’s natural to wonder how much of a Guillermo del Toro project this really is.
Source: https://www.pastemagazine.com/movies/best-horror-movies-on-netflix-streaming/
Kraus, the author of numerous science fiction and fantasy novels — and, with Guillermo del Toro, of the novel version of the film “The Shape of Water” — infuses his prose with a scientist’s rigor and a poet’s sensibility.
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/02/books/review/best-thrillers-2023.html
Some of the humor doesn't work, and the film suffers from a sometimes rather clunky script that needed a few more rewrites or the touch of someone like Guillermo del Toro to get the movie where it needed to be.
What sets Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson’s mordantly macabre stop-motion musical apart from the sanitized Disney versions and the darkly surreal live-action varieties (such as Matteo Garrone’s delightful 2019 adaptation) is the Christ allegory.
Source: https://thefilmstage.com/robyn-bahr-top-10-films-of-2022/