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The staff at Variety liked the film and wrote, "Whirlpool is a highly entertaining, exciting melodrama that combines the authentic features of hypnosis. Ben Hecht and Andrew Solt have tightly woven a screenplay [from a novel by Guy Endore] about the effects of hypnosis on the subconscious, but they, and Otto Preminger in his direction, have eliminated the phoney characteristics that might ...
Whirlpool is a 1959 British crime film directed by Lewis Allen and starring Juliette Gréco and O. W. Fischer. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It was written by Laurence P. Bachmann and Marcel Stellman , based on Bachmann's 1957 novel The Lorelei .
Whirlpool (also known as She Died with Her Boots On and Whirlpool of Sex) is a 1970 exploitation thriller film written and directed by José Ramón Larraz, [a] in his directorial debut, and starring Karl Lanchbury, Vivian Neves and Pia Andersson. [3]
Whirlpool, a 1959 film directed by Lewis Allen, starring O. W. Fischer and Juliette Gréco; Whirlpool, a 1970 thriller film directed by José Ramón Larraz; The Whirlpool, a 1918 American crime drama film directed by Alan Crosland; The Whirlpool, a 1927 Soviet silent film; The Whirlpool, a 2012 American French language romantic drama film ...
Whirlpool is a 1934 American pre-Code drama film directed by Roy William Neill and starring Jack Holt and Jean Arthur. The screenplay concerns a carnival owner convicted of manslaughter after a man is killed in a fight.
Omut (released in English territories as The Whirlpool) [1] (Russian: Омут, romanized: Omut, lit. 'Still Waters') is a 2022 Russian mystical horror film directed by Denis Kryuchkov. It stars Alyona Mitroshina (who makes her film debut), Wolfgang Cerny and Vyacheslav Chepurchenko.
A whirlpool is a body of rotating water produced by opposing currents or a current running into an obstacle. [ 1 ] [ clarification needed ] Small whirlpools form when a bath or a sink is draining. More powerful ones formed in seas or oceans may be called maelstroms ( / ˈ m eɪ l s t r ɒ m , - r ə m / MAYL -strom, -strəm ).
José Ramón Larraz Gil [1] (1929 – 3 September 2013) was a Spanish director of exploitation and horror films such as the erotic and bloody Vampyres (1974), The House that Vanished (1973), Symptoms (1974), Black Candles (1982) and Rest in Pieces (1987) among others.