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Deep End is a 1970 psychological comedy drama film directed by Jerzy Skolimowski and starring Jane Asher, John Moulder Brown and Diana Dors. [1] It was written by Skolimowski, Jerzy Gruza and Boleslaw Sulik. The film was an international co-production between West Germany and the United Kingdom. Set in London, the film centers on a 15-year-old ...
Boorman won Best Director at the 1970 Cannes Film Festival. Let It Be: Michael Lindsay-Hogg: The Beatles: Music documentary: The Longest Most Meaningless Movie in the World: Vincent Patouillard: None: Documentary: The Looking Glass War: Frank Pierson: Christopher Jones: Action, Thriller: Loot: Silvio Narizzano: Richard Attenborough, Lee Remick ...
[8] [9] Roger Ebert wrote The Deep End "is the kind of crime movie where the everyday surroundings make the violence seem all the more shocking and gruesome". [8] In The New York Times, Elvis Mitchell said the film "is fastidious and smart, and Ms. Swinton's fixated intensity isn't ever remote; we're always aware of how deeply she's feeling.
Deep End, a 1970 German-British romantic drama directed by Jerzy Skolimowski; Deep End, a 2023 Taiwanese web drama series starring James Wen and Peter Yu; The Deep End, a 2001 American thriller by David Siegel and Scott McGehee
Asher has appeared in TV shows and films such as Deep End (1970), [2] The Masque of the Red Death (1964), Alfie (1966), The Mistress, Crossroads, Death at a Funeral (2007), and The Old Guys. She also appeared in two episodes of the 1950s TV series The Buccaneers alongside Robert Shaw. She was famously Paul McCartney's girlfriend from 1963 to ...
When it comes to a timeline of sex in movies, there’s before Deep Throat and after Deep Throat.Released 50 years ago in the summer of 1972, the barely hour-long film — directed by Gerard ...
Warning: This story contains spoilers from "Inside Out 2" Emotions are high as "Inside Out 2" hits the big screen. Disney and Pixar's sequel to "Inside Out" is officially out as of June 14, and it ...
The Deep opened to $8,124,316 on 800 screens beating the opening weekend record set by Jaws, although it had opened on almost double the number of screens that Jaws had. [ 19 ] [ 20 ] It was the eighth-highest-grossing film of 1977 in the United States and Canada with a gross of $47.3 million.