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What Happened Was... has an overall approval rating of 91% on Rotten Tomatoes. [6]On the Siskel & Ebert show, Gene Siskel gave the film a thumbs up, stating that "For what is really just one long night of conversation, the stakes and the tension couldn't be any higher if these were two characters having a more conventional action scene."
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 5 Sweet Kill: New World Pictures / Curtis Lee Hanson Tamaroc Productions: Curtis Hanson (director/screenplay); Tab Hunter, Isabel Jewell, Roberta Collins, John Aprea, Rory Guy, John Pearce, Cherie Latimer, Nadyne Turney, Linda Leider
Crooklyn is a 1994 American semi-autobiographical film produced and directed by Spike Lee, who wrote it with his siblings Joie and Cinqué.Taking place in the Bedford–Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, during the summer of 1973, [2] the film primarily centers on a young girl named Troy Carmichael (played by Zelda Harris), and her family.
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 7 The Air Up There: Hollywood Pictures / Interscope Communications: Paul Michael Glaser (director); Max Apple (screenplay); Kevin Bacon, Charles Gitonga Maina, Yolanda Vasquez, Winston Ntshona, Mabutho 'Kid' Sithole, Sean McCann, Dennis Patrick, Nigel Miguel
The actor Donald Sutherland is credited with conceiving the idea for the film in 1972. [9] He hired Mark Lane and Donald Freed to write the screenplay. [10] Sutherland planned to act in and produce Executive Action, but he was compelled to abandon the project after failing to obtain studio financing, and ended up taking a role in another film.
The Last of Sheila is a 1973 American whodunnit mystery film directed and produced by Herbert Ross and written by Anthony Perkins and Stephen Sondheim.It starred Richard Benjamin, Dyan Cannon, James Coburn, Joan Hackett, James Mason, Ian McShane, and Raquel Welch.
Lost Horizon is a 1973 musical fantasy adventure film directed by Charles Jarrott and starring Peter Finch, Liv Ullmann, Sally Kellerman, George Kennedy, Michael York, Olivia Hussey, Bobby Van, James Shigeta, Charles Boyer and John Gielgud. [3]
Highest-grossing films of 1973 Rank Title Distributor Domestic rentals 1 The Exorcist: Warner Bros. $88,500,000 [1]: 2 The Sting: Universal: $79,000,000 [1]: 3 American Graffiti