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Bluebeard is a 1972 film written and directed by Edward Dmytryk and starring Richard Burton, Raquel Welch, Joey Heatherton, and Sybil Danning. The film's plot is very loosely based on the French folktale of a nobleman whose latest wife grows curious when he tells her she may enter any room in his castle but one.
A Day in the Death of Joe Egg: Columbia Pictures / Domino: Peter Medak (director); Peter Nichols (screenplay); Alan Bates, Janet Suzman, Peter Bowles, Sheila Gish, Joan Hickson, Murray Melvin, Fanny Carby, Constance Chapman, Elizabeth Robillard, Elizabeth Tyrell 12 Deep Throat: Bryanston Distributing Company
Films based on Bluebeard (1697) by Charles Perrault. The tale tells the story of a wealthy man in the habit of murdering his wives and the attempts of the present one to avoid the fate of her predecessors.
Still images of bodies being piled are shown throughout the credits, followed by a shot of a bonfire. 1970 House of Dark Shadows: The apparently dead body of Barnabas Collins transforms into a bat and flies away. 1972 Snoopy Come Home: Woodstock types the credits on Snoopy's typewriter. 1977 Martin: The credits overlay Martin's burial. 1978 Hooper
a.k.a. Bluebeard's Castle: 1966 They're a Weird Mob: J. C. Williamson Film Company (Australia)/ Michael Powell Production Pressburger wrote the script as Richard Imrie: 1969 Age of Consent: Nautilus Productions 1972 The Boy Who Turned Yellow: Roger Cherrill Ltd for the Children's Film Foundation: Script by Pressburger 1978 Return to the Edge of ...
The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo (1935) as Despondent Casino Gambler (uncredited) Dublin in Brass (1935) (uncredited) Anything Goes (1936) as Bearded Ballet Master (uncredited) The Prisoner of Shark Island (1936) as Sgt. Rankin; A Message to Garcia (1936) as President William McKinley (voice, uncredited) Under Two Flags (1936) as Cafard
The reception scene was filmed at nearby Lemko Association [37] Hall. The amateur extras cast for the crowded wedding-dance sequences drank real liquor and beer. [38] The scenes were filmed in the summer, in 95 °F (35 °C) weather, [39] but were set in the fall. [22] To accomplish a fall look, individual leaves were removed from deciduous trees.
Movie Tintype (1933–1934) – silent film compilations; Movietone Adventure (1943–1950,1960–1964) – 67 travelogues, many (but not all) in Technicolor. Second set in Cinemascope Deluxe Color. Movietone Melodies (1949–1950) – five big band reels in black & white. Later added a special Movietone Musical in color featuring Tommy Dorsey ...