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Cast Country Notes Ref. A Cold Night's Death: Jerrold Freedman: Robert Culp, Eli Wallach, Michael C. Gwynne: United States Television film Alabama's Ghost: Fredric Hobbs: Christopher Brooks United States [1] And Now the Screaming Starts! Roy Ward Baker: Peter Cushing, Herbert Lom, Patrick Magee: United Kingdom: aka Fengriffen [2] [3] At the ...
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 5 Sweet Kill: New World Pictures / Curtis Lee Hanson Tamaroc Productions: Curtis Hanson (director/screenplay); Tab Hunter, Isabel Jewell, Roberta Collins, John Aprea, Rory Guy, John Pearce, Cherie Latimer, Nadyne Turney, Linda Leider
A Cold Night's Death (also known as The Chill Factor) is a 1973 American made for television horror-thriller film. The film was shown on January 30, 1973, on the ABC network. The film was directed by Jerrold Freedman and starred Robert Culp, Eli Wallach, and Michael C. Gwynne. Culp and Wallach are two research scientists at the Tower Mountain ...
The Exorcist is a 1973 American supernatural horror film directed by William Friedkin from a screenplay by William Peter Blatty, based on his 1971 novel.The film stars Ellen Burstyn, Max von Sydow, Jason Miller, and Linda Blair, and follows the demonic possession of a young girl and the attempt to rescue her through an exorcism by two Catholic priests.
List of horror films of 1973; ... Month: Date: Name: Age: Country: Profession: Notable films: ... List of 1973 films at IMDb; List of 1973 deaths at IMDb;
Shot in the summer of 1971, but not released until 1973, Schlock is the first credited film by John Landis, [1] [2] who also starred in the title role. The feature-length parody of 1950s monster movies was shot in 12 days in the Los Angeles area and had a budget of approximately $60,000, half of which came from Landis' personal savings.
The movie was first released on 20 September 1973 in Irving, Texas, and was later given a wider release in the United States in March 1974. [citation needed] The movie was originally rated X by the Motion Picture Association, and so, after it was sold to Crown International Pictures, the movie's kill sequences were reduced to get a rating of PG ...
The budget, variously estimated at $200,000 [7] or $250,000, [8] was higher than usual for movies shot in the Philippines at the time due to the use of underwater photography. Producer John Ashley admitted that the movie was meant to be a ripoff of The Treasure of the Sierra Madre , but he had high hopes for it because he liked the script so much.