There's Always Vanilla:
Possibly the most obscure feature by independent horror specialist George A. Romero is this pungent little romantic comedy from 1972, also known as "The Affair", about an antiestablishment type (Ray Laine) getting involved with a woman who acts in TV commercials (Judith Streiner). One of t...
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , , , |
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Format: | Video Software |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London
Arrow Video
[2017]
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Schriftenreihe: | George Romero: Between Night and Dawn
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Schlagworte: | |
Zusammenfassung: | Possibly the most obscure feature by independent horror specialist George A. Romero is this pungent little romantic comedy from 1972, also known as "The Affair", about an antiestablishment type (Ray Laine) getting involved with a woman who acts in TV commercials (Judith Streiner). One of the few Romero films written by someone else (Rudolph J. Ricci), it has a good eye for the kind of unglamorous middle-class life seldom seen in American movies (occasionally it even recalls John Cassavetes's "Faces", released four years earlier), and it's highly evocative of the early 70s. It may not be an unqualified success, but I prefer it to the subsequent "Knightriders", another personal effort in which Romero stepped outside the horror genre. (Interestingly enough, the only scene here reflecting Romero's horror-movie orientation - as well as his Catholic background - involves the heroine's trip to an abortionist.) [www.chicagoreader.com] |
Beschreibung: | 1 DVD-Video (92 Min.) farbig |
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series2 | George Romero: Between Night and Dawn |
spelling | There's always vanilla There's Always Vanilla Director: George A. Romero. Director of Photography: George A. Romero. Cast: Raymond Laine ; Judith Ridley ; Johanna Lawrence The Affair London Arrow Video [2017] 1 DVD-Video (92 Min.) farbig tdi rdacontent v rdamedia vd rdacarrier George Romero: Between Night and Dawn Possibly the most obscure feature by independent horror specialist George A. Romero is this pungent little romantic comedy from 1972, also known as "The Affair", about an antiestablishment type (Ray Laine) getting involved with a woman who acts in TV commercials (Judith Streiner). One of the few Romero films written by someone else (Rudolph J. Ricci), it has a good eye for the kind of unglamorous middle-class life seldom seen in American movies (occasionally it even recalls John Cassavetes's "Faces", released four years earlier), and it's highly evocative of the early 70s. It may not be an unqualified success, but I prefer it to the subsequent "Knightriders", another personal effort in which Romero stepped outside the horror genre. (Interestingly enough, the only scene here reflecting Romero's horror-movie orientation - as well as his Catholic background - involves the heroine's trip to an abortionist.) [www.chicagoreader.com] engl. / UT: engl. für Hörgesch. DVD-Video gnd-carrier Romero, George A. drt Laine, Raymond act Ridley, Judith act Lawrence, Johanna act dolby digital 1.0 mono |
spellingShingle | There's Always Vanilla |
title | There's Always Vanilla |
title_alt | There's always vanilla The Affair |
title_auth | There's Always Vanilla |
title_exact_search | There's Always Vanilla |
title_exact_search_txtP | There's Always Vanilla |
title_full | There's Always Vanilla Director: George A. Romero. Director of Photography: George A. Romero. Cast: Raymond Laine ; Judith Ridley ; Johanna Lawrence |
title_fullStr | There's Always Vanilla Director: George A. Romero. Director of Photography: George A. Romero. Cast: Raymond Laine ; Judith Ridley ; Johanna Lawrence |
title_full_unstemmed | There's Always Vanilla Director: George A. Romero. Director of Photography: George A. Romero. Cast: Raymond Laine ; Judith Ridley ; Johanna Lawrence |
title_short | There's Always Vanilla |
title_sort | there s always vanilla |
topic_facet | DVD-Video |
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