Yahoo Web Search

  1. The Eye of the Storm

    The Eye of the Storm

    2011 · Drama · 1h 59m

Search results

  1. Sep 7, 2012 · The Eye of the Storm: Directed by Fred Schepisi. With Charlotte Rampling, Maria Theodorakis, Geoffrey Rush, Jamie Timony. Elizabeth Hunter controls all in her life - society, her staff, her children; but the once great beauty will now determine her most defiant act as she chooses her time to die.

    • (1.7K)
    • Drama
    • Fred Schepisi
    • 2012-09-07
  2. The Eye of the Storm 2011 1 hr. 59 min. Drama List 61% 54 Reviews Tomatometer 46% 5,000+ Ratings Audience Score Elizabeth controls every aspect of her life and her last act of defiance...

    • (54)
    • Geoffrey Rush
    • Fred Schepisi
    • Paper Bark Films
  3. Aug 31, 2011 · Based on the novel by Patrick White, an aging matriarch controls everything in her life-including her time to die. See the film at this years Toronto International Film Festival.

    • Sep 1, 2011
    • 106.2K
    • Rotten Tomatoes Trailers
  4. People also ask

  5. Aug 15, 2023 · EYE OF THE STORM on Netflix is a new thriller from Taiwan (org. title Yi qi ). We follow the SARS outbreak in 2003, where an entire hospital was forced into quarantine. It is brutal, heartbreaking, and feels all too familiar. Read our Eye of the Storm movie review here!

  6. May 4, 2013 · It's the story of a rich, egocentric old matriarch, Elizabeth Hunter (Charlotte Rampling) and her two expatriate children, Sir Basil (Geoffrey Rush), an actor living in London, and daughter Dorothy...

    • 2 min
    • Philip French
  7. Jul 23, 2011 · By Megan Lehmann. July 23, 2011 3:00am. SYDNEY — Prodigal son Fred Schepisi corrals a collection of top-shelf talent for The Eye of the Storm, an intelligent, visually sumptuous drama...

  8. The Eye of the Storm is a gorgeous film, magnificently lensed by Ian Baker and elegantly designed by Melinda Doring. Most of the story occurs in and around Elizabeth’s mansion, so director Fred Schepisi employed everything in his cinematic arsenal to avoid the static look of a filmed play or a lowly tele-movie.

  1. People also search for