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Road to Zanzibar is a 1941 American semi-musical comedy film directed by Victor Schertzinger and starring Bing Crosby, Bob Hope and Dorothy Lamour, and marked the second of seven pictures in the popular "Road to ..." series made by the trio.
Hillcoat preferred to shoot in real locations, saying "We didn't want to go the CGI world." [16] Pennsylvania, where most of the filming took place, was chosen for its tax breaks and its abundance of locations that looked abandoned or decayed: coalfields, dunes, and run-down parts of Pittsburgh and neighboring boroughs. [8]
The 1990 They Might Be Giants song "Road Movie to Berlin" references the films in its title. The TaleSpin episode "Road to Macadamia" pays tribute to the series, including spoofs on the songs. Three episodes of the 1991–1995 animated series Taz-Mania spoofed the Road to.. movies, starring Hugh Tasmanian Devil, Taz's father and a Crosby parody ...
The film is also the only "Road" film that did not take place in modern times though the film begins and ends with the cast made up to look older to frame the flashback. As a “narrator”, humor essayist Robert Benchley provides some wry commentary that is interspersed throughout the movie (Benchley died several months before the film's release).
The Road is a 2006 post-apocalyptic novel by American writer Cormac McCarthy.The book details the grueling journey of a father and his young son over several months across a landscape blasted by an unspecified cataclysm that has destroyed industrial civilization and nearly all life.
"The Road" was released on the 1988 album, Live: The Road, where it was the song recorded in the studio (and one of the two songs on the album never before released).). However, prior to the release of Live: The Road, "The Road" saw single release in Britain (but not A
The Road received mixed reviews from critics. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] [ 16 ] M. Suganth of The Times of India gave 2.5 out of 5 stars and wrote, "The investigation part largely works, and the director manages to keep the mystery under wraps until the reveal, but the film turns pretty generic once we get the identity of the mastermind behind the chilling ...
The Road (stylized as The Яoad) is a 2011 Filipino horror anthology film written, cinematographed and directed by Yam Laranas.Divided into three stories, the film stars Carmina Villarroel, Marvin Agustin, TJ Trinidad, Rhian Ramos, Barbie Forteza, Alden Richards, Lexi Fernandez, Louise delos Reyes, Derrick Monasterio, Ynna Asistio, and Renz Valerio.