安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Barbarian (2022 film) - Wikipedia
Barbarian is a 2022 American horror film written and directed by Zach Cregger in his solo screenwriting and directorial debut It is produced by Arnon Milchan, Roy Lee, Raphael Margules, and J D Lifshitz The film stars Georgina Campbell, Bill Skarsgård, and Justin Long
- Barbarian (2022) - IMDb
Starring the beautiful Georgina Campbell as a lone Airbnb renter who is staying overnight at a house in Detroit, Michigan, "Barbarian" opens with Georgina's character, Tess, arriving at her rental to find that another man - played by Bill Skarsgård - is already occupying the home
- Watch Barbarian | Netflix
A young woman arrives at her Detroit rental house to find it already occupied by an interloper — and by something far worse below the floorboards Watch trailers learn more
- Barbarian (2022) | Rotten Tomatoes
Smart, darkly humorous, and above all scary, Barbarian offers a chilling and consistently unpredictable thrill ride for horror fans The less you know going into Barbarian, the better -- but be
- BARBARIAN | Official Trailer | In Theaters September 9
In “Barbarian,” a young woman traveling to Detroit for a job interview books a rental home But when she arrives late at night, she discovers that the house is double booked, and a strange man is
- Barbarian (2022) — The Movie Database (TMDB)
In town for a job interview, a young woman arrives at her Airbnb late at night only to find that it has been mistakenly double-booked and a strange man is already staying there Against her better judgement, she decides to stay the night anyway
- Barbarian 2022 - Plot Explained - Plot Analysis | MovieTheories
Barbarian begins as a social nightmare and ends as a folk parable about predators, trust, and the stories neighborhoods try to bury Tess arrives in Detroit for a job interview and finds her short term rental already occupied by Keith He seems kind The neighborhood looks abandoned
- Barbarian | Meaning, Connotations, Facts | Britannica
barbarian, word derived from the Greek bárbaros, used among the early Greeks to describe all foreigners, including the Romans The word is probably onomatopoeic in origin, the “bar bar” sound representing the perception by Greeks of languages other than their own
|
|
|