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  1. Celia (also known as Celia: Child of Terror) is a 1989 Australian horror drama film written and directed by Ann Turner, and starring Rebecca Smart, Nicholas Eadie, Victoria Longley, and Mary-Anne Fahey.

    • A$23,336 (Australia), ¥32,255 (Japan)
    • Gordon Glenn, Timothy White
  2. Oct 26, 2022 · Snow Lietta October 26, 2022. A hidden gem of Australian folk horror, Celia follows a young girl as she navigates a fractured world that meets the needs of its people with scapegoats rather than truth. A photograph with four figures. Only the young girl is in focus, staring out of the picture with clear eyes.

  3. www.rottentomatoes.com › m › celia-child-of-terrorCelia | Rotten Tomatoes

    William Zappa. Inspector John Burke. In Theaters At Home TV Shows. Advertise With Us. In 1950s Australia, young Celia (Rebecca Smart) is growing up with a sense of isolation and mistrust of the...

    • (11)
    • Ann Turner
    • Mystery & Thriller
    • Rebecca Smart
  4. Brief Encounter is a 1945 British romantic drama film directed by David Lean from a screenplay by Noël Coward, based on his 1936 one-act play Still Life. Starring Celia Johnson, Trevor Howard, Stanley Holloway, and Joyce Carey, the film follows a passionate extramarital relationship in England shortly before World War II. The protagonist is ...

    • $1 million or $1.4 million
    • Still Life, 1936 play, by Noël Coward
  5. A lot more. Celia, beautifully played by Rebecca Smart, lives in a conservative town with her conservative parents. As the film begins, her grandmother dies, a woman with a bookshelf suggesting she’d been something of a political rebel in her younger days, and Celia loses the one person she really connects with.

  6. Synopsis. A tale of innocence corrupted. An imaginative and somewhat disturbed young girl fantasizes about evil creatures and other oddities to mask her insecurities while growing up in rural Australia. Remove Ads.

  7. 16 Reviews. Hide Spoilers. Sort by: Filter by Rating: 10/10. Dead Rabbits. SteveSkafte 12 October 2010. This film made me uneasy. It's so real, so true to life, so light and so heavy, understated and over the top. It captures all the wild uneasiness and expression and off-center humanity of childhood, and makes it breathless and fully alive.

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