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Bad Lieutenant is a 1992 American crime film directed by Abel Ferrara. The film stars Harvey Keitel as the title character "bad lieutenant" as well as Victor Argo and Paul Calderón. The screenplay was co-written by Ferrara with actress-model Zoë Lund, both of whom appear in the film in minor roles.
Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans is a 2009 American black comedy crime drama film directed by Werner Herzog and starring Nicolas Cage, Eva Mendes, Tom Bower, Jennifer Coolidge, Alvin 'Xzibit' Joiner, Val Kilmer, and Brad Dourif.
1992 Rated NC-17 for pervasive sexuality and graphic sexual dialogue. [36] El Infierno: 2011 Rated NC-17 for some graphic violence and explicit sexual content [37] Emmanuelle: The Joys of a Woman: 1975 Originally rated X in 1976; rating symbol changed to NC-17 in 1991. [38] The Evil Dead: 1981 NC-17 rating acquired in 1994.
The speech is important because she is acute in knowing the journey the Lieutenant makes. She shoots him up, sends him off, knowing of his passion, she lets him go." [8] Lund said in an interview that Bad Lieutenant was the most personal film she had ever acted in. [8] She also claims in another interview that she wrote the screenplay all by ...
Abel Ferrara ([ferˈraːra]; born July 19, 1951) [1] is an American filmmaker, actor, musician, and songwriter. He is best known for the provocative and often controversial content in his movies and his use and redefinition of neo-noir imagery.
A North Carolina father was arrested Monday after allegedly storming into a high school and choking a teenage student in a caught-on-video attack. Quinton Lofton, 43, was charged with felony ...
Bianca Hunter's first appearance was an uncredited role at the age of 3 in a scene with Al Pacino in Serpico (1973), directed by Sidney Lumet. [2] In 1986 she appeared in the music video "Papa Don't Preach" by Madonna with Danny Aiello and Debi Mazar.
A notable Ferrara film in which St. John did not write the screenplay was Bad Lieutenant (1992). A Catholic, St. John refused to work with Ferrara on that particular film because of its blasphemous images. [8] St. John also tried to dissuade Ferrara and Harvey Keitel, who played the titular role, from even making it. [9]