Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Big Bad Mama is a 1974 American action-crime-sexploitation comedy movie produced by Roger Corman, starring Angie Dickinson, William Shatner, and Tom Skerritt, with Susan Sennett and Robbie Lee. This movie is about a mother, Wilma (played by Dickinson), and her two daughters, Polly (Robbie Lee) and Billie Jean (Susan Sennett), who go on a crime ...
1 Plot. 2 Cast. 3 Production. 4 Reception. ... Big Bad Mama II is a 1987 American action–crime ... While it has been identified as a sequel to Big Bad Mama (1974 ...
Crazy Mama is a 1975 American action comedy film, directed by Jonathan Demme, produced by Julie Corman and starring Cloris Leachman. It marked the film debuts of Bill Paxton and Dennis Quaid . The film focuses on a beauty parlor owner and her family, who lose their belongings to repossession .
In 1979 Corman said Rose Garden, Cries and Whispers, and Big Bad Mama "were probably the three most significant films we’ve been involved in [for New World], because each put us into a different area." [21] Joe Dante said "they just didn’t have enough money to do the movie properly. It’s a movie all about a fantasy world that they just ...
The movie was featured in the 2013 book Crab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen, and Candy Stripe Nurses: Roger Corman: King of the B Movie by author Chris Nashawaty. The song "Attack Attack", sung by Olivia Alexander, is featured during the opening credits of the film. Alexander wrote and sang three songs for the film: "Attack Attack", "It's On" and "VIP."
The movie was originally called The Car.It was Charles B. Griffith's first film as director since Forbidden Island (1959), although he had directed second unit on a number of movies such as The Young Racers, The She Beast and Death Race 2000; the latter had been a huge hit for Roger Corman.
Sally Field’s Mrs. Gump was guilty of articulating one of cinema’s silliest similes when she compared life to a box of chocolates, explaining the mercurial inevitability of existence. But it ...
1974 Butley: Ben Butley Alan Bates: Butley, a literature professor and longtime T. S. Eliot scholar with a recently developed interest in Beatrix Potter, is a suicidal alcoholic, who loses his wife and his male lover on the same day. United States, Canada, United Kingdom [18] 1974 The Conversation: Martin Stett Harrison Ford