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Determined to not become victims, Ann and Terry concoct a ploy to overpower their captors. The Bradleys are beaten and the girls escape, during which the monument room of embalmed women is set alight and the previous victims' bodies are seen to take their revenge from the beyond by taking their murderers with them into the blaze.
For Singles Only is a 1968 American comedy film directed by Arthur Dreifuss and starring John Saxon, Mary Ann Mobley in her final film, Lana Wood, Peter Mark Richman and Ann Elder. [ 1 ] Plot
At the same time as the hippies of the late 1960s were imitating Indian fashions, however, some fashion conscious Indian and Ceylonese women began to incorporate modernist Western trends. [71] One particularly infamous fad combined the miniskirt with the traditional sari , prompting a moral panic where conservatives denounced the so-called ...
A Place for Lovers (Italian: Amanti, French: Le Temps des amants) is a 1968 romantic drama film directed by Vittorio De Sica and written by Brunello Rondi, Julian Zimet, Peter Baldwin, Ennio De Concini, Tonino Guerra and Cesare Zavattini.
Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? is a 1968 American comedy film with Doris Day, directed by Hy Averback.Although it is set in New York City during the infamous Northeast blackout of 1965, in which 25 million people scattered throughout seven states in the Northeastern United States lost electricity for several hours, the screenplay by Everett Freeman and Karl Tunberg is based on the ...
Sir John Rowan is a prominent plastic surgeon with a beautiful and youthful fiancée named Lynn, who works as a fashion model. At a raucous party, Rowan – much older than any of the other attendees, and clearly uncomfortable around the countercultural excess of the late 1960s – gets into a physical altercation with a sleazy photographer, and during the scuffle, a hot lamp falls on Lynn ...
The film was released on November 7, 1955, by Paramount Pictures, and was one of the team's highest-budgeted pictures at $1.5 million ($12,589,869.40 in 2011 dollars). The film was shot in VistaVision and Eastmancolor, with prints by Technicolor, and stereophonic sound by Perspecta. Costumes were by Paramount wardrobe designer Edith Head. [4]
The film co-starred Michele Carey, Don Porter, Rudy Vallee and Dick Sargent, [1] and featured Presley's father Vernon in an uncredited cameo. Several of Presley's Memphis Mafia friends, such as Red West and Joe Esposito, also appeared. [1] Released on October 23, 1968, the film failed to impress most critics. [1]