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Mar 02, 2018 Directed by Eli Roth. With Bruce Willis, Vincent D'Onofrio, Elisabeth Shue, Camila Morrone. Paul Kersey is an experienced trauma surgeon, a man who has spent his life saving lives. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures presents director Eli Roth's reimagining of the classic 1974 revenge thriller Death Wish. Paul Kersey (Bruce Willis) is a surgeon who only sees the aftermath of Chicago violence when it is rushed into his ER - until his wife (Elisabeth Shue) and college-age daughter (Camila Morrone) are viciously attacked in their suburban home. Death Wish IV: First Scene.

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures presents director Eli Roth's reimagining of the classic 1974 revenge thriller Death Wish. Dr. Paul Kersey (Bruce Willis) is a surgeon who only sees the aftermath of Chicago violence when it is rushed into his ER - until his wife (Elisabeth Shue) and college-age daughter (Camila Morrone) are viciously attacked in their suburban home. With the police overloaded with crimes, Paul, burning for revenge, hunts his family's assailants to deliver justice. As the anonymous slayings of criminals grabs the media's attention, the city wonders if this deadlyvigilante is a guardian angel or a grim reaper. Fury and fate collide in the intense, action-thriller Death Wish. Paul Kersey becomes a divided person: A man who saves lives, and a man who takes them; a husband and father trying to take care of his family, and a shadowy figure fighting Chicago crime; a surgeon extracting bullets from suspects' bodies, and the vigilante called 'The Grim Reaper' who detectives are quickly closing in on.

Original Release

03/01/2018

Links

Cast

Bruce Willis Paul Kersey
Vincent D'Onofrio Frank Kersey
Dean Norris Detective Kevin Raines
Kimberly Elise Detective Leonore Jackson
Ronnie Gene Blevins Joe
Beau Knapp Knox
Elisabeth Shue Lucy Kersey
Mike Epps Dr. Chris Salgado
Jason Cavalier Officer McCord
Mike Chute Carjacker
(see additional cast & crew)

Directors

Death wish movie in spanish

Writers

Joe Carnahan, Eli Roth, Michael Ferris, Brian Garfield, Wendell Mayes

Creators

Brian Garfield, Wendell Mayes

Cast

Bruce Willis Paul Kersey
Vincent D'Onofrio Frank Kersey
Dean Norris Detective Kevin Raines
Kimberly Elise Detective Leonore Jackson
Ronnie Gene Blevins Joe
Beau Knapp Knox
Elisabeth Shue Lucy Kersey
Mike Epps Dr. Chris Salgado
Jason Cavalier Officer McCord
Mike Chute Carjacker
Jonathan Emond Officer Bailey
Richard Esteras Pimp
Enrique Guzman Punk #2
Austin Kairis Local Resident
Jack Kesy The Fish
Randy Klemola Clubber
Furly Mac Good Samaritan
Ian Matthews Ponytail
Luis Oliva Miguel
Sébastien Peres Carjacker

Producers

Death Wish Movie In Spanish Translate

Ilona Herzberg Executive Producer
Roger Birnbaum Producer
Robert Birnbaum Producer
Sylvester Stallone Producer
Stephen J. Eads Producer
Irene Litinsky Producer
Mark Cotone Producer

Editors

Mark Goldblatt, Yvonne Valdez

Parallel

77

Archenemy

Action-Adventure73

The Lego Movie

93

Last Christmas

89

Death Wish Movie In Spanish

Make a wish in spanish

Monster Hunter

81

Love, Actually

92
Born
Ramón Sampedro Cameán

5 January 1943
Died12 January 1998 (aged 55)
Boiro, Galicia, Spain
Cause of deathAssisted suicide
NationalitySpanish
OccupationSeaman
Known forRight-to-die case

Ramón Sampedro Cameán (5 January 1943 – 12 January 1998) was a Spanish seaman and writer. Sampedro became a quadriplegic at the age of 25 (on 23 August 1968), following a diving accident, and fought for his right to an assisted suicide for the following 29 years.

Demand for suicide[edit]

Death Wish Movie In Spanish Translator

Place in As Furnas where Ramón Sampedro jumped into.

As a young man, Sampedro jumped into the sea from rocks near his home, a fishing village in the northern Spanish region of Galicia.[1] Misjudging the water's depth, he struck his head on the seabed.[1] He sustained a spinal cord injury, leaving him paralyzed from the neck down.[1]

Sampedro applied to Spain's lower courts, its higher courts, and the European Commission on Human Rights in Strasbourg to legally end his life.[1] His argument hinged on the fact that he was sure of his decision to die. However, owing to his paralysis, he was physically unable to die by suicide without help. He argued that suicide was a right that he was being denied, and he sought legal advice concerning his right to receive assistance to end his life, first in the courts of Spain, where his case attracted country-wide attention. Eventually, his fight became known worldwide.

Death and aftermath[edit]

Commemorative plaque for Sampedro in As Furnas.

Sampedro died on Monday 12 January 1998 in Boiro, Spain, from potassium cyanide poisoning.[2] Several days later, his close friend Ramona Maneiro was arrested and charged with assisting his suicide. Sampedro had divided the elements required to complete his suicide into individual tasks, each small enough that no single person could be convicted of assisting the suicide process entirely. Maneiro was released due to lack of evidence. No further charges were ever filed in connection with Sampedro's death.

Seven years later, after the statute of limitations had expired, Maneiro, speaking on a Spanishtalk show, admitted to providing Sampedro with a cyanide-laced drink and a straw. She said 'I did it for love.' She also said she had turned on the video camera that recorded Sampedro's last words before he drank the poison and that she was in the room, behind the camera.

He left an open letter to the judges and the society and caused an ethical turmoil in the Spanish society which led to a Senatorial Committee on Euthanasia in 1999.

In popular culture[edit]

The story of Sampedro's life and death was made into a Spanish film, Mar adentro (2004), directed by Alejandro Amenábar,[3] in which he was portrayed by Javier Bardem.[4] The movie drew international attention and won the Best Foreign Language Film award at the 77th Academy Awards.[5]

Sampedro wrote a book before he died, titled Cartas desde el infierno.[6] It includes a collection of poems, short essays, and reflections on life from Sampedro's point of view. After the release of Mar adentro, it was edited again.[7] As of 2005, 100,000 copies of the book have been sold.[8]

Spanish singer-songwriter Andres Suarez wrote a song inspired by Sampedro's life, titled 'Marinero,' which was included in his 2007 album Maneras de romper una ola.

Sampedro was parodied by Carlos Areces in Spanish Movie (2009).[9]

The storyline of the 2010 Bollywood film Guzaarish is similar to that of Mar adentro.[10][11]

Further reading[edit]

  • Sampedro, Ramón (1996). Cartas desde el infierno [Letters From Hell] (in Spanish). Planeta. ISBN978-84-08-05632-4.
  • Sampedro, Ramón (1998). Cando eu caia [When I Fall] (in Galician). Edicións Xerais. ISBN978-84-8302-260-3.

As You Wish In Spanish

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdUsher, Rod (26 January 1998). 'Live and Let Die'. Time. 151 (4). Archived from the original on 28 June 2011.
  2. ^'A Suicide Tape on TV Inflames the Issue in Spain'. The New York Times. The New York Times Company. 9 March 1998. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  3. ^EP (4 June 2003). 'Amenábar llevará al cine la vida del tetrapléjico Ramón Sampedro'. Diario de León (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  4. ^Agencias (3 June 2003). 'Javier Bardem interpretará al tetrapléjico Ramón Sampedro en la próxima película de Amenabar'. El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  5. ^Agencias (28 February 2005). ''Mar adentro' consigue el Oscar a la Mejor Película de habla no inglesa'. El País (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  6. ^'La resurrección literaria del gallego Ramón Sampedro'. El Mundo (in Spanish). Madrid: Mundinteractivos, S.A. 1 October 2004. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  7. ^'El libro de Ramón Sampedro 'Cartas desde el infierno' vuelve a editarse'. ABC (in Spanish). 29 September 2004. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  8. ^M. L. (19 January 2005). ''Cartas desde el infierno', de Ramón Sampedro, supera los 100.000 ejemplares vendidos'. La Voz de Galicia (in Spanish). Madrid. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
  9. ^García, Julián (2 December 2009). '´Spanish movie´ parodia los últimos éxitos del cine español'. El Periódico Mediterráneo (in Spanish). Grupo Zeta. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  10. ^'Guzaarish story lifted from a Spanish film?'. IBN Live. 24 September 2010. Retrieved 14 February 2011.
  11. ^'Is Guzaarish inspired by Spanish film The Sea Inside?'. The Indian Express. 27 September 2010. Retrieved 14 February 2011.

External links[edit]

Camila Morrone

  • Media related to Ramón Sampedro at Wikimedia Commons

Death Wish Movie In Spanish Language

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ramón_Sampedro&oldid=990023102'