Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Velvet Vampire, also known as Cemetery Girls, is a 1971 American vampire film directed by Stephanie Rothman. It stars Celeste Yarnall, Michael Blodgett, Sherry Miles, Gene Shane, Jerry Daniels, Sandy Ward, and Paul Prokop. It has been cited as a cult film. [3]
In 1971, she starred as the titular vampire in Stephanie Rothman's low-budget film The Velvet Vampire, of which Dave Kehr of the Chicago Reader said, "Given the genre (horror) and the budget (extremely low), it may seem perverse to say that Stephanie Rothman's 1971 film is among the best women's films ever made, but so it is." [3]
Cemetery Girls, an alternative title for Count Dracula's Great Love (originally El gran amor del conde Drácula), a 1974 Spanish film directed by Javier Aguirre; Cemetery Girls, an alternative title for The Velvet Vampire, an American vampire movie from 1971 directed by Stephanie Rothman
The Vampire Happening: Freddie Francis: Pia Degermark, Thomas Hunter, Yvor Murillo West Germany [72] Vampyros Lesbos: Jesús Franco: Ewa Strömberg, Soledad Miranda, Andrés Monales West Germany Spain [73] The Velvet Vampire: Stephanie Rothman: Celeste Yarnall, Michael Blodgett, Sherry Miles United States [74] Venom: Peter Sykes
Stephanie Rothman (2024) Stephanie Rothman (born November 9, 1936, in Paterson, New Jersey) is an American film director, producer, and screenwriter, known for her low-budget independent exploitation films made in the 1960s and 1970s, especially The Student Nurses (1970) and Terminal Island (1974).
After his role in Beyond the Valley of the Dolls in 1970, Blodgett appeared in the Western There Was a Crooked Man..., opposite Kirk Douglas and Henry Fonda, and then The Velvet Vampire (1971). Throughout the 1970s, Blodgett appeared in films and guest starring roles in television series including Barnaby Jones and The Secrets of Isis.
Also known as Vampire Over London. Lugosi plays a character named Von Housen who believes himself to be a vampire. A re-cut American version titled My Son, the Vampire was released in 1963 and featured an introductory segment with a song by American comedian Allen Sherman. Vampire Moth (吸血蛾) 1956 Japan: Nobuo Nakagawa
Typical features include interviews with vampire actors, features on famous vampire film classics, vampire-related news, forthcoming vampire film and book releases. Defunct vampire magazines include Crimson (England); Journal of the Dark (US), Father Sebastiaan's Vampyre Magazine (US) and The Velvet Vampyre (available to members of the ...