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Night of the Seagulls (Original Spanish: La noche de las gaviotas, also known as Don't Go Out at Night, and Night of the Death Cult) is a 1975 Spanish horror film written and directed by Amando de Ossorio. The film is the fourth and final in the Blind Dead series, being the sequel to The Ghost Galleon (1974).
English: The Night of the Blind Terror). The film was the first in Ossorio's "Blind Dead" series, spawning three official sequels: Return of the Blind Dead (1973), The Ghost Galleon (1974) and Night of the Seagulls (1975). Its success helped kickstart the Spanish horror film boom of the early 1970s. [2] [3]
Return of the Blind Dead, The Ghost Galleon and Night of the Seagulls. Monsters very similar to de Ossorio's Templar Knights later appeared in two other Spanish horror films, Jesus Franco's film Mansion of the Living Dead (1982) and Paul Naschy's film The Devil's Cross (1974). Those two films were not connected to de Ossorio's in any way ...
Funny Birds ‡ Funny Birds: Hanna Ladoul & Marco La Via Catherine Deneuve, Andrea Riseborough, Morgan Saylor, John Robinson: UGC [110] The Empire: L'Empire: Bruno Dumont: Camille Cottin, Anamaria Vartolomei, Fabrice Luchini, Lyna Khoudri: ARP Sélection [111] The Last Men ⌀ Les Derniers Hommes: David Oelhoffen: Guido Caprino, Andrzej Chyra ...
The Night of the 12th was released theatrically in France on 13 July 2022 by Haut et Court and in Belgium on 31 August 2022 by O'Brother Distribution. The film received 10 nominations at the 48th César Awards , winning 6, including Best Film , Best Adapted Screenplay , Best Director for Moll, Best Supporting Actor for Lanners, and Most ...
Night Flight Plus is a video-on-demand service offering original episodes of the 1980s USA Network TV show Night Flight. In addition to archived episodes of the show, the service features films in the music documentary, concert, horror and cult genres. [ 1 ]
A second English-language TV adaptation was broadcast by the BBC in 1981, and a stage version by John Crowther was performed by The Heywood Society in the theatre at Peterhouse, Cambridge, in 1985, under the title Talking in the Night. [4] Le Silence de la Mer, a French–Belgian TV adaptation, was directed by Pierre Boutron and screened in 2004.
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