Liza Johnson

Liza Johnson Trailers

The Stink of Flesh Trailer

Liza Johnson (born December 13, 1970) is an American film director, producer, and writer. Along with her collection of short films, Johnson has directed four feature films, including Return (2011), Hateship, Loveship (2013), and Elvis & Nixon (2016).

Most Popular Liza Johnson Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Saving Bikini Bottom: The Sandy Cheeks Movie Trailer (2024)

18 October 2024

When Bikini Bottom is scooped from the ocean, scientific squirrel Sandy Cheeks and her pal SpongeBob SquarePants saddle up for Texas to save their town.

The Stink of Flesh Trailer (2005)

31 May 2005

Nathan and Dexy struggle to maintain an open marriage after a zombie plague has killed the majority of the population.

Elvis & Nixon Trailer (2016)

22 March 2016

In 1970, a few days before Christmas, Elvis Presley showed up on the White House lawn seeking to be deputized into the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs by the President himself.

Karrabing! Low Tide Turning Trailer (2012)

10 February 2012

In the Northern Territory of Australia, an extended Aboriginal family attempts to track down a missing family member so as not to lose their government housing.

Return Trailer (2011)

10 February 2011

Back from a tour of duty, Kelli struggles to find her place in her family and the rust-belt town she no longer recognizes.

In The Air Trailer (2009)

01 January 2009

In Southeastern Ohio, April works in a scrap yard. Daphany waits for customers in a fast food windows

Hateship Loveship Trailer (2014)

11 April 2014

A shy caretaker believes that the father of her teenage charge is falling in love with her, unaware that she is actually the victim of the girl's prank.

South of Ten Trailer (2006)

29 September 2006

A girl flees a makeshift tent city. A man finds a trombone. A worker watches the ocean from under a moving house, while its owner gazes at the view from her shifting living room.

When the Dogs Talked Trailer (2014)

18 December 2014

As a group of Indigenous adults argue about whether to save their government housing or their sacred landscape, their children struggle to decide how the ancestral Dreaming makes sense in their contemporary lives.