The director of Black Phone is "not closed off" to creating a sequel.

Scott Derrickson is the director of the horror/thriller "The Black Phone," which is based on a short story by Joe Hill. Derrickson claims to have transformed this short narrative into a full-length feature picture by using events from his own life. The writing of Stephan King's son, Joe Hill, and Joe Hill bears an uncanny likeness. Most significantly, Stephan King's stories left you with a bittersweet nostalgia that transported you back to your younger years. In many of his stories, you observed abusive behavior, flawed human behavior, and innocence—or the absence of it.
Despite the fact that "The Black Phone" is billed as a horror/thriller, it focuses more on internal than external occurrences. Derrickson was raised in Denver, Colorado, where abuse and violence were prevalent. The majority of the kids he knew experienced frequent bullying. Those that managed to avoid it were left to deal with an aggressive parent at home. Everyone should be cautioned that before seeing "TheYou should be warned that terror and suspense are minor components in the movie "Black Phone." The movie is about sticking up for someone else, supporting your loved ones no matter what, and about a different kind of maturity that doesn't wait for age to increase but develops fully via life events.
A baseball game was being played in 1978. Finney When Bruce Yamada hit Blake for a home run, Blake had managed to record two strikes. After the match, Bruce was courteous enough to visit Finney and let him know that he had nearly defeated him. Finney wasn't accustomed to such generosity. He had consistently experienced peer bullying and had grown somewhat accustomed to it. At home, things were not much better. His drunken father frequently beat him and his sister Gwen. His father struggled to cope with the death of his wife in some unspecified place. ThoughAlthough "The Black Phone" doesn't provide any information about his past, one can assume that after his wife left, things would have gone awry. She used to experience hallucinations, which drove her insane. When Gwen informed him that she occasionally had nightmares that materialized into reality, he would frequently become enraged. Gwen was informed by him that her fantasies were nothing more than that. Finney didn't have many friends, but Robin was one of his coworkers, and Robin liked the fact that Finney never used force and considered Finney a close friend. He repeatedly protected him from bullies while also warning him that he would eventually need to stand up for himself.

The 1986 picture was a lighthearted, disposable action flick with a great soundtrack and a cool, self-contained mythos. People discover that they are immortal at the moment of death. An immortal gains his powers if he beheads another person. Bring on the rooftop brawl between Christopher Lambert and Clancy Brown, some neon, and clattering swords.


And in "Highlander II: The Quickening," the sequel, returning director Russell Mulcahy adds pointless backstory to a complicated tangle of a plotline that only an immortal has time to comprehend. The heroes and villains in "Highlander" are now from space in addition to living eternally. Even Michael Ironside, who at least 60% of the time makes movies better,
The original "American Psycho" looks at how everything, even human life itself, is undervalued and commoditized to the wealthy and is a clever, witty satire of the 1980s lifestyle. You will never get back the 88 minutes you spent watching the sequel "American Psycho 2: All American Girl," which stars Mila Kunis. You'll yearn for the bittersweet relief of passing away.

