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Color of Night is a 1994 American erotic mystery thriller film produced by Cinergi Pictures and released in the United States by Buena Vista Pictures (through its Hollywood Pictures label). The film was directed by Richard Rush , was jointly written by Billy Ray and Matthew Chapman and stars Bruce Willis opposite Jane March .
Lauren Christy (born 1968) is a British songwriter and record producer. Originally a solo artist, she found success as part of the writing production trio the Matrix.The Matrix was nominated for the Grammy Award for Producer of the Year, Non-Classical at the 46th Annual Grammy Awards.
"The Color of the Night" from Color of Night, music and lyrics by Jud J. Friedman, Lauren Christy and Dominic Frontiere (also nominated for a Golden Globe) "Under the Same Sun" from On Deadly Ground, written by Mark Hudson, Klaus Meine and Scott Fairbairn Worst Remake or Sequel: Wyatt Earp (Warner Bros.) – Kevin Costner / Lawrence Kasdan ...
According to Color of Night director Richard Rush, March still received many offers from Hollywood studios after the film's release, but Zozzora required the studios to also hire him as the producer for any film in which March would star, a condition most studios rejected. [5] For this reason, March did not star in more films during their ...
Colours of the Night is an album by Moroccan Gnawa musician Maalem Mahmoud Gania.It was recorded in 2013 at Studio Plein Les Oreilles in Casablanca, Morocco, and was initially released on CD for distribution within Morocco before being issued as a double LP in 2017 by Hive Mind Records as the label's first release.
His film Color of Night won a Golden Raspberry Award as the worst film of 1994, but Maxim magazine also singled the film out as having the best sex scene in film history. [1] Rush, whose directing career began in 1960, also directed Freebie and the Bean, a police buddy comedy/drama starring Alan Arkin and James Caan.
All the Colors of the Dark (Italian: Tutti i colori del buio) is a 1972 giallo film directed by Sergio Martino and starring Edwige Fenech, George Hilton and George Rigaud. [2] [3] The film was also released under the alternate titles Day of the Maniac and They're Coming to Get You!.
For example, the night sky looks darker than Eigengrau because of the contrast provided by the stars. Contrast threshold data, collected by Blackwell [5] and plotted by Crumey, shows Eigengrau occurring at adaptation luminances below approximately 10 − 5 cd m −2 (25.08 mag arcsec −2). [6] This is a limiting case of Ricco's law.