Movies Starring Tracey Walter
Total movies found: 37, viewing from 1 to 20
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I Spit on Your Grave
[ 2010, USA ] starting from $1.99It's Date Night
Actors: Sarah Butler, Daniel Franzese, Chad Lindberg, Jeff Branson, Tracey Walter, Andrew Howard, Saxon Sharbino, Mollie Milligan, Rodney Eastman, Amber Dawn Landrum
Directors: Steven R. Monroe
Writer Jennifer Hills (Butler) takes a retreat from the city to a charming cabin in the woods to start on her next book. But Jennifer's presence in the small town attracts the attention of a few morally deprived locals who set out one night to teach this city girl a lesson. They break into her cabin to scare her. However, what starts out as terrifying acts of humiliation and intimidation, quickly and uncontrollably escalates into a night of physical abuse and torturous assault. But before they can kill her, Jennifer sacrifices her broken and beaten body to a raging river that washes her away. As time passes, the men slowly stop searching for her body and try to go back to life as usual. But that isn't about to happen. Against all odds, Jennifer Hills survived her ordeal. Now, with hell bent vengeance, Jennifer's sole purpose is to turn the tables on these animals and to inflict upon them every horrifying and torturous moment they carried out on her... only much, much worse. Written by Anonymous
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The Short Films of David Lynch
[ 2002, USA ] starting from $1.99Genres: Documentary, Animation, Horror
Actors: Mark Wood, Robert Chadwick, Catherine E. Coulson, Eddy Dixon, Frederic Golchan, Rick Guillory, Michael Horse, Patrick Houser, David Lynch, Peggy Lynch, Virginia Maitland, Dorothy McGinnis, Jack Nance, Russ Pearlman, Pam Pierrocish, Clyde Small, Talisa Soto, Harry Dean Stanton, Tracey Walter, Richard White
Directors: David Lynch
An oddball collection of short films from the master of oddity, David Lynch, this release provides a compelling look at some of Lynch's rarely seen shorter works, including "The Grandmother," a story about a boy who grows a grandmother as an alternative to his abusive parents; "The Amputee," a film about an amputee attempting to write a letter; and "The Alphabet," an eerie animation from Lynch's student days. Covering films from the 1960s to the 1990s, this release goes inside the peculiar sensibility and aesthetics of one of our most idiosyncratic filmmakers.



