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Poison Ivy is a 1992 American erotic thriller film directed by Katt Shea. It stars Drew Barrymore, Sara Gilbert, Tom Skerritt and Cheryl Ladd. The original music score is composed by David Michael Frank. The film was shot in Los Angeles. It premiered at Sundance on January 21, 1992, where it was nominated for the Grand Jury prize of Best Film. [2]
Poison Ivy is an erotic thriller film series that consists of four films. The first three films in the series deal with the implications of an emotionally neglected, sexually assertive young woman's fascination with her best friend's father, and how her desire for him affects multiple individuals who fall under her influence.
The film was also included in John Kenneth Muir's 2011 book Horror Films of the 1990s. Muir wrote that, "The New Seduction is the sleaziest and raunchiest of the Poison Ivy films, and on those terms, [is] a lot of wicked fun." He also noted that, "after the navel-gazing Poison Ivy: Lilly (1996), the franchise returns to its horror roots here." [11]
Poison Ivy: The Secret Society is a 2008 American made-for-television erotic thriller drama film directed by Jason Hreno. It is a standalone sequel to the 1997 film Poison Ivy: The New Seduction and the fourth and final installment of the Poison Ivy film series. The film premiered on Lifetime on July 27, 2008.
Poison Ivy is a 1985 American made-for-television romantic comedy film starring Michael J. Fox and Nancy McKeon, directed by Larry Elikann, and written by Bennett Tramer.The film premiered on NBC on February 10, 1985 and aired just months before Fox's feature film breakthrough Back to the Future and follow-up Teen Wolf.
Poison Ivy II: Lily is a 1996 American direct-to-video erotic thriller film directed by Anne Goursaud, written by Chloe King and stars Alyssa Milano. It is a sequel to the 1992 film Poison Ivy and the second installment of the Poison Ivy film series .
She was then hired by New Line to make Poison Ivy which was a critical and popular hit. In 1992, her films were honoured with a four-day retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art including the New York premiere of Poison Ivy. [11] According to Larry Karidish, a curator of film at the museum:
It was French director Bernard Borderie's first film, as well as American-born French actor Eddie Constantine's. The screenplay is based on the 1937 Lemmy Caution thriller Poison Ivy by Peter Cheyney, which had been in 1945 the first title published in Marcel Duhamel's Série noire. The story involves FBI agent Caution investigating gold ...