Quote:
A woman with an unusual birth defect comes to a doctor who has an unorthodox solution to make the best of her situation.Read More »
1970s
-
Gerard Damiano – Deep Throat (1972)
1971-1980EroticaGerard DamianoUSA -
Stanislav Rostotskiy – A zori zdes tikhie AKA The Dawns Here Are Quiet (1972)
1971-1980ActionStanislav RostotskiyUSSRWar

Plot:
When a detachment of German troops lands nearby, a group of five Russian anti-aircraft gunner women must warn their colleagues. But when they discover that saboteurs have destroyed their only means of communication, the ladies must take matters into their own hands by fighting the enemy soldiers themselves.Read More » -
Just Jaeckin – Madame Claude (1977)
1971-1980DramaEroticaFranceJust Jaeckin

Based on a true story. Madame Claude, a well connected Parisienne with dark past, runs a network of high-class call girls. She sends her girls to any place in the world to satisfy sexual desires of wealthy and powerful men. Claude’s manipulations also involve big business and politics. Meanwhile, photographer David Evans is trying to clear his own criminal record by providing the authorities with pictures of Claude’s girls with important clients in compromising positions. But powerful men can do anything to keep their secrets…Read More »
-
Rainer Werner Fassbinder – Die Niklashauser Fart aka Niklashuasen Journey (1970)
1961-1970ArthouseDramaGermanyRainer Werner FassbinderIn the 15th century, Hans Bohm, a shepherd, claimed to have been visited by the Virgin Mary. He began preaching and gathered around him thousands of disciples who believed him to be the New Messiah. He was arrested and burned at the stake by the church. Fassbinder uses this true story to reflect the sexual and political upheaval in Germany, showing how and why revolution fails.Read More »
-
Woody Allen – Unreleased Granada TV Interview (1971)
1971-1980ComedyTVUnited KingdomWoody AllenHere’s an unaired Woody Allen interview from 1971. Woody refuses to give a truthful answer to any question, yet continues the interview for nearly 40 minutes (perhaps longer, given that other footage aired).Read More »
-
Satyajit Ray – The Inner Eye (1972)
1971-1980ArthouseDocumentaryIndiaSatyajit Ray

Synopsis
The Inner Eye is the second of Satyajit Ray’s four great documentaries and tells you about the life and art of Binode Behari Mukherjee (1904-1980). Mukherjee was one of the most admired renaissance painters of Bengal. Trained by the great Nandalal Bose during his early years in Santiniketan (Rabindranath Tagore’s university for the liberal arts), Benode Behari painted profusely.Read More » -
Woody Allen – Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story (1971)
1971-1980ComedyPoliticsUSAWoody AllenThe rarest Woody Allen film can now be seen.
Men of Crisis: The Harvey Wallinger Story is a short film directed by Woody Allen in 1971. The film was a satirization of the Richard Nixon administration made in mockumentary style.
Allen plays Harvey Wallinger, a thinly disguised version of Henry Kissinger. The short was produced as a television special for PBS and was scheduled to air in February 1972, but it was pulled from the schedule shortly before the airdate. Reportedly, PBS officials feared losing its government support and decided not to air it. Allen who previously had sworn off doing television work cited this as an example of why he should “stick to movies”. The special never aired and can now be viewed in The Paley Center for Media.Read More »
-
Kazuhiko Yamaguchi – Aku no shin’eitai AKA Troops of Darkness (1971)
Kazuhiko Yamaguchi1971-1980ActionCampJapan

A disgraced yakuza member, framed for the murder of his boss, emerges from prison eight years later with revenge on his mind.Read More »
-
Yoshishige Yoshida – Kokuhakuteki Joyûron AKA Confessions Among Actresses (1971)
1971-1980ArthouseDramaJapanYoshishige YoshidaSynopsis:
The film’s narrative follows three leading actresses, all appearing in the same movie (but not appearing in the same shot until the end of the film), and all undergoing their own personal crises. It’s very formally worked out, through a series of carefully balanced dialogues with confessors, synchronized confrontation scenes, and staggered flashbacks. If Farewell was Yoshida’s self-conscious Resnais tribute, this is him in Bergman mode (Mariko Okada’s story even begins with her experience hysterical mutism, à la Persona), though the finished product is much livelier and more pungent than anything Bergman would have come up with (maybe Zetterling’s The Girls is a more apposite reference point). On another level, it’s also referencing a big old Hollywood melodrama, pastel panoramas in various shades of bitch (there are also nods to All About Eve).Read More »




