1970s

  • James Frawley – The Big Bus (1976)

    James Frawley1971-1980ActionComedyUSA
    The Big Bus (1976)
    The Big Bus (1976)

    A star-studded cast headlines this outlandish spoof on disaster films in which a gigantic nuclear powered bus–containing a swimming pool, a bowling alley, and a piano bar–and goes out of control and nearly crashes while making a coast-to-coast journey. With a cannibalistic driver (Joseph Bologna) and an oil company man who is working overtime to sabotage the bus, the passengers (Stockard Channing, Richard Mulligan, Ruth Gordon, Rene Auberjonois, and more) assured a bumpy ride. Director James Frawley’s (TV’s The Monkees) is an obvious influence on 1980’s AIRPLANE!.Read More »

  • Ana Hatherly – Revolução AKA Revolution (1975)

    1971-1980Ana HatherlyDocumentaryExperimentalPortugal
    Revolução (1975)
    Revolução (1975)

    In celebration of the 50th anniversary of the 25 de Abril revolution.
    50 years of freedom.

    Fátima Rolo Duarte wrote:
    The speed of each image sewn together with the speed of each image in the blink of an eye. For what is worth, memory remains intact after all. The walls turn outwards, emerge from the darkness, vibrate. Sound accompanies things, signs, seemingly disordered fragments. Ana Hatherly is the director-weaver of this monument in honor of the immediate 25th of April. Alive, crazy and praised for its vertiginous editing, “incoactive mosaics”, to use a felicitous expression by Marie-José Mondzain. Read More »

  • Claudine Eizykman – Bruine Squamma (1977)

    Claudine Eizykman1971-1980ExperimentalFrance
    Bruine Squamma (1977)
    Bruine Squamma (1977)

    Movie’s themes : French experimental of the 70’s, Time

    Quote:
    “Claudine Eizykman’s Bruine Squamma (bruine: a kind of mist which absorbs and reflects light, and squama: a sliver of the epidermis which is shed from the skin), is impressive for the way it is organised and its jamming of a series of sporadic images, infinitely repeated and varied, with no narrative impulse whatsoever. Nothing but flashes, explosions, extinctions, splashes of images which succeed one another, shift forward or back, are superimposed, as in a game of transparent cards.”
    Boris Lehman in La relève, 25/11/77.Read More »

  • Charles B. Griffith – Eat My Dust (1976)

    1971-1980ActionCharles B. GriffithExploitationUSA
    Eat My Dust (1976)
    Eat My Dust (1976)

    Darlene’s into going fast, Hoover’s into Darlene, but when they both get into a red-hot race car, the reckless fun accelerates into a trunk-full of hot pursuits.Read More »

  • Claudine Eizykman – V.W. Vitesse Women (1974)

    Claudine Eizykman1971-1980ExperimentalFrance
    V.W. Vitesse Women (1974)
    V.W. Vitesse Women (1974)

    Quote:
    One of the most important films of French avant-garde cinema, displaying Claudine Eizykman’s theory of “cinematographic energy” as well as creating kinetic movements capable of shaking up the world and revealing its heterogeneity.Read More »

  • Siegfried Hartmann – Schneeweißchen und Rosenrot AKA Snow White and Rose Red (1979)

    1971-1980FantasyGermanySiegfried Hartmann
    Schneeweißchen und Rosenrot (1979)
    Schneeweißchen und Rosenrot (1979)

    In an enchanted forest, the princely brothers Michael and Andreas get lost and are transformed, by a mountain spirit who jealously guards his underground treasure, into animals until the unlikely event of sincere love from a human. The only persons who may be able to give such love are the local commoner sisters Snowwhite and Rose-red, who are kind and helpful by nature and stand to harvest unimagined rewards.Read More »

  • Bruno Corbucci – Messalina, Messalina! (1977)

    1971-1980Bruno CorbucciEroticaItaly
    Messalina, Messalina! (1977)
    Messalina, Messalina! (1977)

    The story of Messalina’s rise to power amid her relationship with Emperor Claudius.Read More »

  • Cheh Chang – Wu ming ying xiong AKA The Anonymous Heroes (1971)

    Cheh Chang1971-1980ActionComedyHong Kong
    Wu ming ying xiong (1971)
    Wu ming ying xiong (1971)

    Quote:
    Meng Kang (David Chiang) and Tieh (Ti Lung) are shallow thrill seekers and friends whose goal it is in life to merely have a good time. These reckless youths are recruited to the side of the Chinese revolution by Wan (Ku Feng shedding his gray wig and mustache in a rare heroic role). Meanwhile, Marshall Chin (Cheng Miu), a high-ranking army official, secures a cache of 3000 rifles delivered from the nation of Japan. Marshall Chin intends to use these weapons to crush the rebel forces. Wan convinces Meng and Tieh to assist him in stealing the rifles away from the army. The task seems hopeless however, since Marshall Chin is aware of the spies in his midst and places the rifles under heavy guard. Three men alone cannot defy an entire army. Help arrives in the form of the beautiful and spunky Pepper (Ching Li), whose father is a captain of the guard. Read More »

  • Michael Pressman – The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976)

    Michael Pressman1971-1980ActionExploitationUSA
    The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976)
    The Great Texas Dynamite Chase (1976)

    Exploitation film vixen Claudia Jennings stars with Jocelyn Jones in this all-trash rip-off of Bonnie and Clyde with Jennings and Morgan playing a pair of sexy bank robbers who blast their way into countryside banks with a carload of fresh dynamite. The story literally begins with a bang as Candy Morgan (Claudia Jennings) dynamites her way out of jail and proceeds to blow up a bank where Ellie-Jo Turner (Jocelyn Jones) has just lost her job. Candy and Ellie-Jo team up and go on a bank-robbing crime spree. When Ellie-Jo is detained for shoplifting, the outlaw girls take Slim (Johnny Crawford) as a hostage. Slim and Ellie-Jo become lovers and Slim joins the merry band, playing the role of hostage during the gals’ bank robberies. However, the law is slowly closing in on them.Read More »

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