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Joseph W. Sarno (March 15, 1921 – April 26, 2010) was an American film director and screenwriter. [2]Sarno emerged from the semi-pornographic sexploitation film genre of the 1950s & 1960s; he had written and directed approximately 75 theatrically released feature films in the sexploitation, softcore and hardcore genres [2] as well as a number of shot-on-video features for the 1980s hardcore ...
In a central European castle, two young girls are summoned to learn about a will making them heirs to the property, on condition that they stay there for a full year.
In 1975, Everett was hired by Joe Sarno to film two movies in Sweden: Butterfly and Laura's Toys. He had a brief romance with Laura's Toys co-star, Marie Forså. [7] [9] [10] When he returned to New York, Fitch had moved out of their apartment. Everett went back to live with Kathy 2. By 1976, she had moved out and Everett and Fitch had divorced ...
20th Century Fox / Golden Harvest / The Movie Company: Brian Trenchard-Smith (director/screenplay); Jimmy Wang Yu, George Lazenby, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Roger Ward, Ros Speirs, Rebecca Gilling, Frank Thring, Sammo Hung, Grant Page, Bill Hunter, John Orcsik, Brian Trenchard-Smith, Andre Morgan, Phillip Avalon, Roy Chiao, Deryck Barnes, Elaine Wong A ...
As the title suggests, SNL 1975 takes place on Oct. 11, 1975, “where a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television forever,” according to the film’s initial announcement.
Netflix's "Maria," starring Angelina Jolie, imagines opera singer Maria Callas' last days. The true story of her life was of abuse, drugs, and health issues.
A 1974 Swedish erotic film, featuring an actress Marie Forså, shot in two versions; explicit softcore (containing the image of erect penis and "barely hidden fellatio") and hardcore version (with inserts, involving the actors from original production – released theatrically in France in 1975). Bach Films DVD released both versions. [76] [77]
A fifth story in the Immoral Tales was originally planned, but was taken out of the film and developed into the feature film La Bête (1975). [4] Arrow Films released a version of the movie on physical media with the story added as the third tale. [5] 30 gallons of real blood (from pigs) were used for the Countess Bathory's bath. [6]