A Marine platoon led by Captain Stern (Richard Harrison) has 36 hours to scout the island of Rabaul and make sure all of the Japanese resistance has been wiped out before the Allies launch one massive, final bombing mission. This is an Italian response to the excellent “Beach Red” by Cornel Wilde.Read More »
ynopsis wrote:
Kidnapped by some fake policemen, young Richard Werner is taken to the headquarters of Fantabulous Inc. on the outskirts of Geneva and transformed into a Superman, F. 17. Professor Beethoven, owner of Fantabulous, initiates negotiations to sell his superman to the great powers, but as F. 17 accidentally sees Deborah, his girlfriend, again, something scrambles in his brain, blowing up the electronic devices embedded in it so that he regains all his normal faculties. As military troops converge on Fantabulous to seize him, F 17, back to being Richard again, succeeds in destroying the electronic brain that guided his movements so as to prevent Professor Beethoven’s scientists from creating any more monstrous dehumanized beings.Read More »
A man is doing research on an island where a strange tribe lives. The man’s wife gets into a (sexual) relationship with a woman from the tribe and brings her back to the big city where problems begin to occur.Read More »
Hajji Hossein-Gholi Noori (Haji Baba) goes to Washington D.C. as the first Iranian (Persian) ambassador to the United States of America. After he opens the embassy, he is unable to invite statesmen to visit him. Haji fires the embassy staff due to the inability of the Persian government to meet the embassy’s needs. One night he is visited by President Grover Cleveland.Read More »
Perseus is designated by fate to save the peaceful kingdom of Serifos by defeating a sea monster and the gorgon Medusa, then by repelling the advancing army of the hostile city of Argos.
The film’s unique and terrifying version of Medusa was the early work of Carlo Rambaldi, who later gained fame in Hollywood creating creatures for King Kong, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and E.T. The sea monster was supervised by Armando de Ossorio, who later directed the Spanish “Blind Dead” quadrilogy.Read More »