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  1. Red Lights is a 2012 psychological supernatural thriller film written, directed, produced and edited by Rodrigo Cortés and starring Cillian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, Robert De Niro, Toby Jones, Joely Richardson, and Elizabeth Olsen.

  2. Mar 2, 2012 · Red Lights: Directed by Rodrigo Cortés. With Cillian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, Robert De Niro, Toby Jones. Psychologist Margaret Matheson and her assistant debunk paranormal activity, which leads them to investigate a world-renowned psychic who has resurfaced after many years out of the limelight following the suspicious death of his toughest ...

    • (66K)
    • Drama, Fantasy, Mystery
    • Rodrigo Cortés
    • 2012-03-02
  3. Red Lights Trailer 2012 - Official movie trailer in HD - starring Cillian Murphy, Sigourney Weaver, Robert De Niro, Elizabeth Olsen - taut psychological thriller from award-winning...

    • 3 min
    • 667.6K
    • Cieon Movies
  4. Red Lights Official Trailer #1 - Robert De Niro, Cillian Murphy Movie (2012) HD SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/ujzn05 Psychologist Margaret Matheson and her assistant study paranormal activity,...

    • 3 min
    • 713K
    • Rotten Tomatoes Trailers
  5. Psychologist Margaret Matheson and her assistant study paranormal activity, which leads them to investigate a world-renowned psychic who has resurfaced years after his toughest critic mysteriously...

    • 3 min
    • 390.5K
    • Millennium Entertainment
  6. www.primevideo.com › detail › Red-LightsPrime Video: Red Lights

    Red Lights. A psychologist (Sigourney Weaver) and her assistant (Cillian Murphy) investigate a world-renowned psychic (Robert De Niro) who has resurfaced years after his toughest critic mysteriously passed away. IMDb 6.2 1 h 53 min 2012. 16+. Drama · Fantasy · Cerebral · Tense.

  7. People also ask

  8. Jul 25, 2012 · I'd love to see a thriller that was about what "Red Lights" starts to be about, the debunking of psychics by expert paranormal investigators. For its first two acts, the movie had me in its grip. Then it comes apart. Is there a fatal compulsion that draws movies into unnecessary action scenes?