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The Mind Benders is a 1963 British thriller film produced by Michael Relph, directed by Basil Dearden and starring Dirk Bogarde, Mary Ure, John Clements, Michael Bryant and Wendy Craig. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Screenwriter James Kennaway turned his screenplay into his 1963 novel of the same name .
The Mindbenders were an English beat group from Manchester. [1] Originally the backing group for Wayne Fontana, they were one of several acts that were successful in the mid-1960s British Invasion of the US charts, achieving major chart hits with "The Game of Love" (a number-one single with Fontana) in 1965 and "A Groovy Kind of Love" in 1966.
The Mind-Benders is an educational antidrug [3] documentary film concerning hallucinogens produced for the United States Food and Drug Administration in 1967. It "explores the potential therapeutic uses and the known hazards of LSD and other hallucinogens, as well as some of the motivations of abusers". [1]
The Mind Benders, a British thriller film; The Mind-Benders, an American antidrug documentary film; Mindbender, a 1995 film about Uri Geller by Ken Russell; Mindbenders (film), a 2004 American science fiction film "Mindbender" , a 1971 television episode "Mindbender" (X-Men: Evolution), a 2002 television episode
"The Game of Love" is a 1964 song by Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, first released as a single from the band's titular album in January 1965 in the United Kingdom, followed by the United States one month later as "Game of Love". The song reached Number 2 on the
The Mind Benders is a 1963 novel by the British writer James Kennaway. [ 1 ] It is based on the screenplay he had written for the film The Mind Benders directed by Basil Dearden , which was released the same year.
Glyn Geoffrey Ellis (28 October 1945 – 6 August 2020), [1] known professionally as Wayne Fontana, was an English rock and pop singer best known for fronting the beat group the Mindbenders, with whom he recorded the hit singles "Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um" (1964) and "The Game of Love" (1965).
The Mind Benders Cyril Ronald Vosper (7 June 1935 – 4 May 2004) was an anti-cult leader, [ 1 ] former Scientologist and later a critic of Scientology , deprogrammer , and spokesperson on men's health .