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  1. Calvary, also known as The Ordeal) is a 2004 psychological horror film directed by Fabrice Du Welz, starring Laurent Lucas, Philippe Nahon and Jackie Berroyer. It was Fabrice Du Welz's first full-length film. Marc Stevens (Laurent Lucas) is a young traveling singer. After a concert at a nursing home a few days before Christmas, Marc takes to ...

  2. May 18, 2004 · Calvaire (The Ordeal) has a certain amount of grim potential, but loses effectiveness by too often mistaking disturbing gore for genuine horror. A stranded singer falls victim to a dangerously...

    • (32)
    • Laurent Lucas
    • Fabrice Du Welz
    • Studio Canal
  3. Mar 9, 2005 · Calvaire: Directed by Fabrice du Welz. With Laurent Lucas, Brigitte Lahaie, Gigi Coursigny, Jean-Luc Couchard. Marc, a traveling entertainer, is on his way home for Christmas when his van breaks down in the middle of a jerkwater town with some strange inhabitants.

    • (14K)
    • Drama, Horror, Thriller
    • Fabrice du Welz
    • 2005-03-09
  4. Where to watch. Currently you are able to watch "Calvaire" streaming on AMC+ Amazon Channel, Shudder, Shudder Amazon Channel, Shudder Apple TV Channel. It is also possible to buy "Calvaire" on Amazon Video, Vudu, Google Play Movies, YouTube as download or rent it on Amazon Video, Google Play Movies, YouTube, Vudu online.

    • (161)
    • 25
    • Fabrice Du Welz
    • 88 min
  5. Apr 23, 2020 · Fabrice du Welz directs this haunting thriller with a tinge of dark humor. REVIEW: Starring: Laurent Lucas, Jackie Berroyer, Jean-Luc Coucherd. Director: Fabrice Du Welz. Writers: Fabrice Du Welz, Romain Protat. Calvaire is about a low level singer/performer, Marc (Lucas), on the fringe of the entertainment business in France.

  6. Released August 11th, 2006, 'Calvaire' stars Laurent Lucas, Gigi Coursigny, Jackie Berroyer, Jean-Luc Couchard The movie has a runtime of about 1 hr 28 min, and received a user score of 59 (out...

  7. Aug 10, 2019 · Intense rural horror films like Calvaire (retitled The Ordeal for U.S. release) generally try to get under their audiences’ skin by trafficking in down-and-dirty realism, but one of the best scenes in this Belgian entry is its most surreal.