‘Annihilation’ on Netflix: Moviegoers Need to Take Responsibility For Paramount’s Controversial Deal
Alex Garland’s science-fiction thriller was a box office dud in the U.S., but it’s not Paramount’s fault these kind of movies are a hard sell.
Alex Garland’s science-fiction thriller was a box office dud in the U.S., but it’s not Paramount’s fault these kind of movies are a hard sell.
They don’t make ’em like “Annihilation” anymore, but there’s already world of mind-bending sci-fi films out there if you know where to look.
In its first 10 days, “Black Panther” has already nearly matched “Wonder Woman.” For “Annihilation,” great reviews only meant $11 million.
Like everything else in the film, “it had been destroyed and changed.”
Alex Garland’s adaptation runs the risk of alienating diehard fans of Jeff VanderMeer’s novel, but it’s the rare film that improves on its source material.
“Ex Machina” director Alex Garland has another science-fiction classic on his hands.
“Annihilation” opens this Friday — get ready by revisiting some of Garland’s mind-bending work.
An eerie jungle survival saga about the survival of the fittest, Garland’s mysterious thriller has a lot on its mind.
The actress stars in Alex Garland’s creepy and clever adaptation of Jeff VanderMeer’s novel, a female-led feature that could mark yet another sea change in an evolving Hollywood.
The director wrote and cast “Annihilation” based on the first novel in Jeff VanderMeer’s trilogy, which doesn’t reference the lead character’s heritage until the second book.
“Annihilation” is based on the first book in a trilogy, where the lead characters heritage isn’t discussed until the second novel.
Director Alex Garland is especially thankful of Rian Johnson for letting Isaac sneak away each day to film his scenes on “Annihilation.”