The Gallows photograph

The Gallows

Use attributes for filter !
Web site www.youtube.com
Initial release Brazil
Germany
Indonesia
Directors Travis Cluff
Chris Lofing
Budget100,000 USD
Box office43 million USD
Producers Jason Blum
Guymon Casady
View 1+
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID536419
Send edit request

About The Gallows


In 1993, a freak accident involving a noose kills teenager Charlie Grimille during a high-school production of "The Gallows. " Twenty years later, on the eve of the play's revival, students Reese (Reese Mishler), Pfeifer (Pfeifer Brown), Ryan (Ryan Shoos) and Cassidy become trapped in the auditorium, with no way of calling for help. A night of terror awaits the four friends as they face the wrath of a malevolent and vengeful spirit. It seems Charlie will have his curtain call after all.

The Northampton shoemaker who caught the Auschwitz commander

The Northampton shoemaker who caught the Auschwitz commander
Nov 11,2023 8:41 pm

... Höss was hanged on 16 April 1947 at the site of the former Auschwitz camp - The Gallows stood at the remains of the camp s Gestapo building, next to the first crematorium at Auschwitz, and 100 metres from the villa where he had lived with his family...

Delhi's earliest crimes revealed by 1800s police records

Delhi's earliest crimes revealed by 1800s police records
Jul 8,2023 11:10 pm

... And a few of those, who managed to remain within the city walls, had to live under the constant threat of getting shot or being hanged to The Gallows...

The Gallows Pole: Shane Meadows does period drama - with an office worker and mechanic

The Gallows Pole: Shane Meadows does period drama - with an office worker and mechanic
May 29,2023 8:40 pm

... Her audition tape earned her a role in Meadows The Gallows Pole, which is set in West Yorkshire in the 1760s and starts on BBC Two this week...

Edith Thompson: Hanged woman's pardon reconsidered after U-turn

Edith Thompson: Hanged woman's pardon reconsidered after U-turn
Jan 10,2023 2:11 am

... She was executed at Holloway Prison on 9 January 1923 where she had to be carried to The Gallows with her arms and ankles bound following days of injections of a powerful sedative...

Winter set to be worst ever for A& E waits, health leaders warn

Winter set to be worst ever for A& E waits, health leaders warn
Dec 31,2022 5:41 am

... Dr Boyle remarked: " The Gallows joke about this is now that 24 hours in A& E is not a documentary, it s a way of life...

Author Benjamin Myers on the crop-circle makers who 'blew people's minds'

Author Benjamin Myers on the crop-circle makers who 'blew people's minds'
May 13,2022 3:45 am

... His award-winning 2017 book The Gallows Pole, about an 18th Century coin-clipping gang, is currently being turned into a BBC drama by director Shane Meadows...

Arrest after mock gallows erected outside Houses of Parliament

Arrest after mock gallows erected outside Houses of Parliament
Oct 20,2021 8:28 pm

... The Gallows and noose have now been take down...

The nun who walks death row inmates to the gallows

The nun who walks death row inmates to the gallows
Feb 16,2020 7:45 am

... The two women held hands on that final walk to The Gallows...

Delhi's earliest crimes revealed by 1800s police records

Feb 16,2020 7:45 am

By Zoya MateenBBC News, Delhi

On a Cold January night in 1876, two weary travellers knocked at Mohammed Khan's house in Delhi's Sabzi Mandi - a thriving labyrinth of narrow alleys in India's Capital - and asked if they could stay The Night .

Khan graciously decided To Let The Guests sleep in His room. But The Next morning, he found that The Men had disappeared. Also missing, was Khan's bedroll which he had given The Men to rest. Khan had been robbed, he realised, in a way like No Other .

Nearly 150 years on, The Story of Khan's ordeal Now features in a list of The earliest crimes reported in Delhi, records for which were uploaded on The City police's website last month.

The " antique FIRs" provide details into some 29 other similar cases that were registered at The City 's five main police stations - Sabzi Mandi , Mehrauli, Kotwali, Sadar Bazar and Nangloi - Between 1861 to The early 1900s. In Khan's case, The Police caught The Men and sent them to three months in jail on charges of Theft .

Originally filed in The tenacious Urdu shikastah Script - which also has words in Arabic and Persian - The FIRs were translated and complied by a team led by Assistant Commissioner of Delhi Police Rajendra Singh Kalkal, he also illustrated each of The cases himself.

Mr Kalkal told The Bbc The Records " spoke to him" because of The fascinating insights they offered into The lives of people in a City which has survived waves of conquests and change. " The files are a window to The Past as well as The Present , " he says.

Most of The Complaints involve petty crimes of Theft - of stolen oranges, bedsheets and Ice Cream - and carry a comical lightness to them. There's a gang of men who ambushed a shepherd, slapped him and took away His 110 goats; A Man who nearly stole a bedsheet but got caught " at a distance of 40 steps" and The sad case of Darshan, The Guardian of gunny bags, who gets beaten black and blue by thugs before they snatch His quilt and a Shoe - just one of The pair - and Run Away .

For anyone familiar with India's past, this might seem odd given how The 1860s was a particularly grim period in Delhi's history. The Mughal rule had just ended after The British suppressed The revolt of 1857, often referred to as India's first war of independence. The City - Once an idyll of pleasure gardens, Sufi devotion, arts and Mughal regalia - Now laid in ferment, sacked and looted.

Artist and historian Mahmood Farooqi says that one possible reason why no serious crimes occurred at that Time Was that people had become deeply intimidated by The British , who continued to run a an iron-fisted rule in The Years after The revolt.

Men, women and children were brutally massacred. Many were forced to leave Delhi forever and move to The surrounding countryside, where they lived The Remaining years in abject poverty. And a few of those, who managed to remain within The City walls, had To Live under The constant threat of getting shot or being hanged to The Gallows . " This Was a time of carnage. People were terrorised and brutalised so much that they bore its trauma for years. "

Mr Farooqui adds that unlike other cities such as Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) where Modern Policing had already taken shape, Delhi continued to run on a unique, " a purana, or old" system of policing, laid under The Mughal rule, which was hard to dismantle and replace completely. " So discrepancies or gaps in records are not entirely Out of question. "

The Records , which lie in The Delhi Police Museum , were discovered sometime Last Year . Mr Kalkal, who was in-charge of The research and preservation of The Museum 's artefacts, said he found them while he was browsing through The musty old archives one fine day. " I saw hundreds of FIRs lying in obscurity. When I read them I realised how its format has remained unchanged even after 200 years. "

Mr Kalkal says he too was struck by The innocuous nature of The offences, a time when stealing objects like cigars, pyjamas and oranges was " The worst imaginable thing".

But The fact that relatively benign crimes were being reported to The Cops does not necessarily mean that a lot of heinous crime weren't already Happening - Mr Kalal suspects The First case of homicide would've surfaced as early as 1861 itself, when an organised form of policing was established by The British under The Indian Police Act.

" Finding murder cases was not The focus of our research but I Am sure they are there, somewhere, " he says.

In many complaints, The outcome of The case is marked as " untraceable" suggesting that The Culprit was never caught. But in several other, such as Khan's case, swift punishment appears to have been delivered with severity ranging from whippings, beating with canes to a few odd weeks or months of jail time.

One such crime took place at The City 's most graceful Grande Dame , The 233-room Imperial Hotel , in 1897. A chef from The Hotel was sent to The Sabzi Mandi Police Station with a " complaint letter in English" stating that A Band of thieves, in an act of unimaginable travesty, had nicked a liquor bottle and a pack of cigars from one of The Rooms . The Hotel announced a handsome reward of 10 rupees for catching The Men . But The case turned cold and could never be solved.

" Today, crimes have become so sophisticated that it takes months and years to solve them. But life was much simpler Back Then , you either cracked a case or didn't, " Mr Kalkal says.

Mr Kalkal's team couldn't be happier about The compilation but he says The Initial process of translation was hardly delightful. The difficulty of reading The Urdu shikasta Script wore him down on multiple occasions and for cracking that, His team had to seek The skill and persistence of Urdu and Persian scholars and maulvis brought in from every corner of The City .

" But we always knew The effort was Worth It , " he says.

He was particularly charmed by one passage which described a Police Officer 's annoyance after he was forced to park His " vehicle" - His beloved Horse - Out in The Heat while investigating A Theft case.

" The Details really make you wonder how far we've come, isn't it? "

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

The Gallows Photos

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯