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Bug

Paranoia is contagious
2007 | 98m | English

(39843 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: William Friedkin
Writer: Tracy Letts
Staring:
Details

In Oklahoma, Agnes, a lonely waitress living in an isolated and dilapidated roadside motel, meets Peter, a quiet and mysterious man with whom she establishes a peculiar relationship.
Release Date: Feb 21, 2007
Director: William Friedkin
Writer: Tracy Letts
Genres: Drama, Horror, Thriller
Keywords drug abuse, isolation, paranoia, oklahoma, friendship, based on play or musical, conspiracy theory, drinking, phone, parasite, psychosis, military veteran, ex-husband ex-wife relationship, motel room, abused woman
Production Companies LIFT Productions, Inferno Distribution, DMK Mediafonds International
Box Office Revenue: $8,095,658
Budget: $4,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Ashley Judd Agnes White
Michael Shannon Peter Evans
Harry Connick Jr. Jerry Goss
Lynn Collins R. C.
Brían F. O'Byrne Dr. Sweet
Neil Bergeron Man in Grocery Store
Bob Neill Pizza Harris (voice)
Name Job
William Friedkin Director
Tracy Letts Theatre Play, Screenplay
Brian Tyler Original Music Composer
Bonnie Timmermann Casting
Steve Boeddeker Sound Designer
Christien Tinsley Special Effects Makeup Artist
Serj Tankian Additional Music
Darrin Navarro Editor
Franco-Giacomo Carbone Production Design, Art Direction
David K. Nami Special Effects Supervisor
Dianne Kennedy Costume Supervisor
Beth Miller Hairstylist, Hair Department Head
Jon Kuyper Unit Production Manager, Line Producer
Barry Bedig Property Master
Ruby C. Haupt Boom Operator
Timothy A. Wonsik Costume Supervisor
Ronald Eng Supervising Sound Editor
Aaron Levy Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Peggy Schnitzer Costume Designer
Frank J. Zito III Set Decoration
Robert Vazquez Special Effects Supervisor
Pamela Waggoner Set Costumer
Patrick Melville Hairstylist
Jeffrey Haupt Sound Mixer
Michael Salven First Assistant Director
Mike Karasick Gaffer
Michelle Rolland Property Master
Catherine Rowe Foley Artist
Terry Haggar Color Timer
Michael Grady Director of Photography
Caleb Guillotte Art Department Coordinator
Stephen Vincent Casting Associate
Jillian Amburgey Script Supervisor
Brad Wilder Makeup Artist, Makeup Department Head
Jay Faires Music Supervisor
Steve Lonano Second Assistant Director
Anthony Friedkin Still Photographer
Gilly Charbonnet Key Grip
Sean Rowe Foley Artist
Name Title
Bonnie Timmermann Co-Producer
Michael Burns Producer
Malcolm Petal Producer
Holly Wiersma Producer
Gary Huckabay Producer
Andreas Schardt Producer
Kimberly C. Anderson Producer
Michael Ohoven Executive Producer
Jim Seibel Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 16 25 8
2024 5 19 45 9
2024 6 30 48 13
2024 7 33 54 19
2024 8 25 48 10
2024 9 12 19 8
2024 10 13 23 7
2024 11 15 25 6
2024 12 13 18 9
2025 1 14 27 9
2025 2 9 16 3
2025 3 5 18 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 3 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 1 2 1

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2024 12 254 593
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 175 549

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Reviews

tmdb28039023
6.0

Possession has been a lifelong preoccupation for William Friedkin. He’s addressed it head-on as both fiction and fact, but Bug sees him take a more oblique route. Here’s the story of a man so thoroughly possessed by paranoia that his delusions are contagious. One demon leaves one body to enter anoth ... er, but an obsession is Legion. Every Michael Shannon performance is arguably his best, but this is a film tailor-made for his fascinating idiosyncrasies. Aphid and spastic, his body language stops short of actually turning into a freaking insect. Ashley Judd, however, has a more challenging role, because not only does she have to sell the transition from sane to crazy, but then she has to catch up with Shannon, go toe-to-toe with him, match his manic intensity — and I’ll be damned if she doesn’t; Judd digs deep and reaches a place of utter darkness and desperation. She stares right into the abyss and doesn’t flinch. Everybody is in point, though; Friedkin and screenwriter Tracy Letts, pull off the rare double-turn (to use wrestling terminology). Harry Connick Jr., who plays Judd’s character’s abusive ex, is all brawn and no brains, while Shannon starts out helpless and meek (his patented, infallible calm-before-the-storm routine); we begin to dread the seemingly inevitable moment when Connick beats Shannon within an inch of his life, only to end up wishing that the former would slap some sense into the latter. The only problem with this film is that it builds so much momentum it just can’t help crashing and burning. It’s so climactic that it actually becomes anticlimactic. There’s no resolution, no catharsis. For all its shock and awe, The Exorcist allows itself a hopeful, optimistic coda; Bug lacks such an escape valve. This time, the Devil wins.

Sep 03, 2022