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Mainstream is a 2020 American comedy-drama film directed by Gia Coppola, who co-wrote the screenplay with Tom Stuart. It stars Andrew Garfield , Maya Hawke , Nat Wolff , Johnny Knoxville and Jason Schwartzman .
Examples of this type of hybrid release include Café Flesh (1982)—the R-rated version of this science fiction porn film was released to mainstream cinemas; [17] Stocks and Blondes (1984), originally available as Wanda Whips Wall Street; [18] and Droid (1988), originally released as Cabaret Sin in 1987. [citation needed]
List of films shown at the New York Film Festival; List of films shown at the Sundance Film Festival; List of films spoofed by Mad; List of films with a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes; List of films with a 0% rating on Rotten Tomatoes; National Film Registry; Sight & Sound. The Sight & Sound Greatest Films of All Time 2012; Time ' s All-Time ...
Michael Winterbottom's 9 Songs arguably remains the most sexually explicit (non-porn) British movie of all time. It contains several scenes of unsimulated sex between the two leads (Kieran O'Brien ...
[16] [17] First NC-17-rated film to be released on Netflix. [18] [19] Blue Is the Warmest Color: 2013 Rated NC-17 "for explicit sexual content" [20] The film was released with the NC-17 rating, yet took in over $19 million overall. [21] Broken English: 1996 Rated NC-17 for explicit sexuality; edited version rated R for language, violence, and ...
Mainstream jazz, a term coined in the 1950s to describe the form of jazz which was a continuation of the Swing era; Mainstream, a late-1990s British shoegazer band, or their first album; Mainstream (Fullerton College Jazz Band album), 1994; Mainstream (Lloyd Cole and the Commotions album), 1987; Mainstream (Quiet Sun album), 1975
While most cinematic films have a broad theatrical release in multiple locations through normal distribution channels, some of the longest films are experimental in nature or created for art gallery installations, having never been simultaneously released to multiple screens or intended for mainstream audiences.
John Gielgud, Malcolm McDowell, Helen Mirren and Peter O'Toole appeared in the movie Caligula, a film where producer Bob Guccione would eventually film and add explicit unsimulated sex scenes after the original filming had been completed; McDowell later expressed his outrage over this. [1] Gielgud also wrote a screenplay for a pornographic film ...