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  1. Crash is a 2004 American crime drama film produced, directed, and co-written by Paul Haggis and Robert Moresco. A self-described "passion piece" for Haggis, the film features racial and social tensions in Los Angeles and was inspired by a real-life incident in which Haggis's Porsche was carjacked in 1991 outside a video store on Wilshire ...

  2. www.imdb.com › title › tt0375679Crash (2004) - IMDb

    6. Mai 2005 · Crash: Directed by Paul Haggis. With Karina Arroyave, Dato Bakhtadze, Sandra Bullock, Don Cheadle. Los Angeles citizens with vastly separate lives collide in interweaving stories of race, loss and redemption.

    • 3 Min.
  3. Synopsis. After the end-of-year ball, several teens set out to shake off the dust of high school with quiet kick-ons in a palatial house outside Wellington. The vibes shift with the arrival of Yannick, a drop-out who’s determined to amp up the party, whose blustering insistence on more, more, more threatens to spill over into blind rage.

  4. Gate crashing. Gate crashing, gatecrashing, or party crashing is the act of entering, attending, or participating in an event without an invitation or ticket. [1] The term has also come to be used to refer to intrusions on videographed sessions, such as interviews and news reports, either by parties the video producers did not intend to feature ...

  5. 19. Feb. 2021 · Director: Lawrence Gough. With an exciting opening shot of a car racing through flat countryside (Essex, Norfolk?) as the sky turns red at dusk or perhaps at dawn, Lawrence Gough’s film promises ...

  6. gate-crash vb to gain entry to (a party, concert, etc) without invitation or payment ˈgate-ˌcrasher n Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition ...

  7. 18. Feb. 2021 · Gatecrash is by far the superior project, showing the benefits of directorial experience over the intervening decade or so; it’s an often jarring, discomfiting film which, like Salvage, unfolds almost entirely in a narrow domestic setting with just a handful of characters. Unfolding some neat tricks along the way, it is able to overcome its few odd omissions or oversights.