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  1. The Scribbler

    The Scribbler

    R2014 · Action · 1h 30m

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  1. Sep 19, 2014 · Powered by JustWatch. With narrative echoes of “Sucker Punch” and stylistic commonalities with “ Sin City ,” one would expect John Suits ’ “The Scribbler,” adapted by graphic novelist Dan Schaffer, to at least be a bit of escapist fun. A female empowerment, mental illness-defeating, noir-esque comic book movie with B-movie ...

    • Identity

      It is a dark and stormy night. A violent thunderstorm howls...

    • Sin City

      If film noir was not a genre, but a hard man on mean streets...

  2. Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports that 40% of ten surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 5.7/10. [4] Metacritic rated it 27/100 based on six reviews. [5] Geoff Berkshire of Variety likened it to Sucker Punch as if it were made by The Asylum. [6]

    • The Scribbler, by, Daniel Schaffer
    • Alec Puro
  3. Sep 19, 2014 · 46% 13 Reviews Tomatometer 38% 250+ Ratings Audience Score A young woman with multiple personalities uses an experimental machine designed to eliminate her other identities one by one. However,...

    • (13)
    • John Suits
    • R
    • Katie Cassidy
  4. Nov 6, 2014 · The Scribbler: Directed by John Suits. With Katie Cassidy, Garret Dillahunt, Michelle Trachtenberg, Eliza Dushku. A young woman is facing her destructive multiple personalities using an experimental new procedure known as "The Siamese Burn."

    • (5.1K)
    • Mystery, Sci-Fi, Thriller
    • John Suits
    • 2014-11-06
  5. Sep 18, 2014 · ‘The Scribbler’: Film Review. A young woman suffering from multiple personality disorder finds herself living in a halfway house with a suspiciously high suicide rate

  6. Sep 19, 2014 · Verdict. The Scribbler tries to be the clever low-budget sci-fi thriller that will be a cult favorite, but it is neither smart nor thrilling. It’s a drippy pudding of cliché ideas tossing about...

  7. Oct 28, 2014 · October 28, 2014. By. Jess Hicks. “Stylized” is often a hit or miss term for me in film because it habitually becomes the prime focus of the film itself with only a bare thread of story sewn...

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