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Amy was originally filmed as a television movie titled Amy on the Lips, and was the first television movie that Disney Studios made for an adult audience. [3] Nanette Fabray and Louise Fletcher were interested in the role of "Malvina", a teacher of deaf children. Fabray, who played the part, was hearing impaired, and Fletcher's parents were ...
Adele contacts James Lockwood, attorney and best friend of Amy's father (Arlen Dean Snyder) to discuss Amy's situation, but she overhears this and runs off to college in anger. There, the mysterious man shows up again and terrifies her, as she tries to escape, until lawyer student David Norland ( Gary Graham ) appears.
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y: 7 Scream: Cal-Com: Byron Quisenberry (director/screenplay); Pepper Martin, Hank Worden, Ethan Wayne, Alvy Moore, Bobby Diamond, Woody Strode, Ann Bronston, Julie Marine, Nancy St. Marie, Joseph Alvarado, John Nowak, Joe Allaine, Cynthia Faria, Bella Bluck, Dee Cooper, Bob Macgonigal, Gino Difirelli, Gregg Palmer
Amy Medford, the title character of Amy, a Walt Disney Pictures live-action film. Amy Minoru, the older sister of Nico Minoru in the TV series Runaways. Amelia "Amy" Pond, companion of the Doctor in the TV series Doctor Who. Amy Pond, a character in the TV series Supernatural. Amy Raudenfeld, a main character in the TV series Faking It.
March 6, 1981: Dirty Tricks: distribution only; produced by Filmplan International March 13, 1981: The Howling: co-production with International Film Investors and Wescom Productions May 15, 1981: Take This Job and Shove It: co-production with Cinema Group Ventures May 29, 1981: Dead & Buried: distribution only June 5, 1981: The Night the ...
Still images of bodies being piled are shown throughout the credits, followed by a shot of a bonfire. 1970 House of Dark Shadows: The apparently dead body of Barnabas Collins transforms into a bat and flies away. 1972 Snoopy Come Home: Woodstock types the credits on Snoopy's typewriter. 1977 Martin: The credits overlay Martin's burial. 1978 Hooper
The film ends ambiguously with her being pulled away on a stretcher while she is asking about Paul's whereabouts coming in and out of sedation. [1] In Part III (1982), Ginny appears in the films cold open flashbacking her confrontation with Jason and is later confirmed to have survived on a news report detailing her ordeal.
Knightriders is a 1981 American action drama film written and directed by George A. Romero and starring Ed Harris, Gary Lahti, Tom Savini, Amy Ingersoll, Patricia Tallman, and Christine Forrest. It was filmed entirely on location in the Pittsburgh metro area, including Fawn Township and Natrona during the summer of 1980.