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The Countess of Baton Rouge; Creature (2011 film) Creature from Black Lake; D. Dark Waters (1944 film) ... Swamp Thing (1982 film) Swamp Women; T. Thunder Bay (film ...
Bad Country (also known as Whiskey Bay) is a 2014 American crime drama film based on a true story [2] starring Matt Dillon, Willem Dafoe, Neal McDonough, Amy Smart, and Tom Berenger. The film started shooting in Baton Rouge and Angola, Louisiana on August 7, 2012. [3]
Mozart, a saxophonist, dreams of going to America, to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, which he considers the capital of blues music. The dream soon becomes a reality in the wake of Abdenour falling in love with Becky, a young American, and thanks to one of his friend's tricks allows all of them to obtain airline tickets to New York City. Their pursuits ...
The film was shot on location in Baton Rouge, Louisiana during the summer of 1982. [7] In May, during filming, Pryor was hospitalized with pneumonia. He was released after a week and resumed filming. [8] Donner blamed this on the air pollution in Baton Rouge which he said was the worst he had ever experienced.
Baton Rouge is a 1988 Spanish neo-noir [1] thriller film directed by Rafael Moleón which stars Carmen Maura, Victoria Abril, and Antonio Banderas. Plot [ edit ]
Exterior scenes were filmed in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, along the banks of Cane River Lake, and in and around Natchez, Mississippi. [8] The film company built a bridge over the Cane River for the pivotal battle scene, and many locals were hired as extras. [8] It also features scenes shot in Wildwood Regional Park in Thousand Oaks ...
Battleship (film) Bayou (film) The Baytown Outlaws; Beasts of the Southern Wild; Because of Winn-Dixie (film) The Beguiled (2017 film) Belle River (film) The Best of Me (2014 film) The Beyond (1981 film) Big Shark; Blaze (1989 film) The Blind (film) The Blob (1988 film) Blonde Ambition; Broken City; Bug (2006 film) Bullet to the Head
MGM were commissioned to make the movie with Calderon as producer, Richard Caffey as executive producer and David Goldsmith as production executive. [2] The Deadly Tower was filmed between the 16 June through 4 July 1975, at the Louisiana State Capitol in Baton Rouge, Louisiana because the University of Texas refused to allow filming there. [2]