The Yes Girls | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lindsay Shonteff |
Written by | Lindsay Shonteff |
Produced by | Lindsay Shonteff |
Starring | Sue Bond |
Cinematography | John C. Taylor |
Edited by | Jackson Bodell |
Music by | Alan Gorrie |
Production company | Lindsay Shonteff Film Productions Ltd. |
Release date |
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Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Yes Girls, also known as Take Some Girls and Excitement Girls, is a 1972 British film directed by Lindsay Shonteff and starring Sue Bond and Sally Muggeridge. [1] A woman escapes from a school for delinquent girls and becomes involved with a lecherous porn director.
Maria Carter has recently escaped from an approved school and in London meets aspiring actress Angela and her room-mate Caron. The three girls get parts in a low-budget sexploitation movie called Flesh in the Fields, which against all odds turns out to land Maria a Hollywood deal.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A low budget sex movie about the making of a low budget sex movie. The 'Hollywood looks at Hollywood' formula has been adapted in an appropriately basic way and the humour relentlessly excavates every cliché. The producer grinds his teeth on an everlasting cigar over every item of expenditure, while his disconsolate director is ever eager to find an artistic angle, even when ordered to 'get a close-up of Maria's joggling, roly-poly charms. The three girls have, however, some genuine charm of their own and there is something horribly apt about the film-within-a-film they turn out – an ultimate in primitive nudie pics that looks like a titillating interlude from The Running, Jumping and Standing Still Film [1959]." [2]
Devil Girl from Mars is a 1954 British second feature black-and-white science fiction film, produced by the Danziger Brothers, directed by David MacDonald and starring Patricia Laffan, Hugh McDermott, Hazel Court, Peter Reynolds, and Adrienne Corri. It was released by British Lion, and released in the United States the following year. A female alien is sent from Mars to acquire human males to replace their declining male population. When negotiation, then intimidation, fails she must use force to obtain co-operation from a remote Scottish village where she has landed her crippled flying saucer.
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Secrets of Sex, released in the US as Tales of the Bizarre and Bizarre, is a 1970 British multi-genre sexploitation anthology film, directed by Antony Balch and narrated by Valentine Dyall.
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Lad: A Dog is a 1962 American drama film based on the 1919 novel of the same name written by Albert Payson Terhune. Starring Peter Breck, Peggy McCay, Carroll O'Connor, and Angela Cartwright, the film blends several of the short stories featured in the novel, with the heroic Lad winning a rigged dog show, saving a handicapped girl from a snake, and capturing a poacher who killed his pups and injured one of his owners. Warner Brothers purchased the film rights for the novel from Vanguard Productions, and acquired the film rights for the other two Lad novels from the late Terhune's wife.
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Amuck! is a 1972 Italian giallo film written and directed by Silvio Amadio.
How to Succeed with Sex is an American sex comedy film written and directed by Bert I. Gordon., released on October 30, 1972.
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