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On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 50% of 8 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.0/10. [7]Rubén Romero Santos of Cinemanía rated the film 3½ out of 5 stars, rallying laggards to join the Mario Casas bandwagon, highlighting the transformation experienced by the actor from Three Steps Above Heaven to The Paramedic, in which he plays a "wheelchair-bound ...
Armando Sáenz as El Practicante (Ruiz) Juan Carlos Calvo as El Padre sin hijos (Señor Hinojosa) Patricia Morán as La Moribunda (Carmen Rosado) Miguel Ángel López is disamb as El Torero (Lalo) Queta Lavat as La Enfermera (Irene) Felipe Montoya as El Médico de Comisaría (Dr. Sevilla) Enrique Díaz 'Indiano' as El Droguista (Sr. Bermúdez)
A movie that centres on people attending an artistic/sexual salon was a likely contender to feature unsimulated sex and Shortbus does, but director John Cameron Mitchell had a reason for including it.
Rated NC-17 for sexual violence, strong sexual situations & dialogue, graphic drug use; edited version rated R for drug use, language, violence, and nudity (the R-rated version was created only because the film's producers wanted the film to be carried by Blockbuster Video and the cost of creating the new edit and then receiving an R from an ...
The Lover (French: L'Amant) is a 1992 erotic romantic drama film produced by Claude Berri and directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud.Based on the semi-autobiographical 1984 novel of the same name by Marguerite Duras, the film details the illicit affair between a teenage French girl and a wealthy Chinese man in 1929 French Indochina.
In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies The Fargo actor even performed at Gilford and wife Kiele Sanchez’s wedding in 2013. “He played guitar and sang when my wife walked down ...
The Cuckoo's Curse (Spanish: El cuco) is a 2023 supernatural thriller film directed by Mar Targarona [] from a screenplay by Alfred Pérez-Fargas and Robert Danès, and starring Belén Cuesta, Rainer Reiners, Jorge Suquet, and Hildegard Schroedter.
The film became the first Argentine film banned following new censorship rules under military dictator Juan Carlos Onganía.Advised by Jaime Cabouli, a well-known distributor, Bó and Sarli went to New York City with the film's negative where it was released, following a $150,000 publicity campaign, at the Rialto West and Rialto East on October 10, 1969.