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JayceeTatler's Replies
....it puts forward a convincing case that the company has a past worth celebrating, but that last minute AI leaves you with concerns that Hammer's ability to make bad decisions didn't end with the 20th century.
For the record, this was what was posted about her on the old IMDB message boards: could be true, could be nonsense.
"My friend knows her and she works downtown at a theatre selling tickets. I guess she's very self absorbed along with a bad attitude. Thats probably why she was'nt successful in the film business.
The moral of the story is don't think your better than others and they might want to work with you again. As I said, my friend knows her well and says that she just does'nt get it. When your as pretty as her and still single at 44yrs old, there's a reason. Attitude is everything.
My friend has know her since her since the 80's and said that she is very self absorbed. That conversation with her is always about herself. Hence the reason she's still single and never been married. She thinks the world owes her everything and just never got it. Its too bad. Looks will only
take you so far. She could have had a great life, but at 44yrs old, she'll never get it. I guess you'd call her stuck up and snobbish.
I think you bring up a lot of good and factual points. There's absolutley something psychological going on, but for the record Jeremy tried to pursue her acting career for 8 or 9 years after Creepshow 2. The attitude was a big factor. I have empathy, but do not reward bad behavior from
anyone. At some point, one has change their ways, or be doomed to repeat the past. We all have things from our past that we need to work on. You can't change if you don't acknowledge. I think thats the problem with Jeremy".
It's unusual but her character's name Laverne isn't that common these days either....not unique though, as there's also Jeramie Rain from Last House on the Left.
I remember taping Evil toons off German TV in the 1990s. Pretty dismal film, but that scene with Monique Gabrielle admiring her considerable charms in the mirror sure got rewound and paused allot 🍈🍈. good times.
Not just Suspiria....
Ruby (1977) featuring a levitating car and a scene where a character is killed by a reel of film, played in Britain on a double bill with Norman J Warren's Satan's Slave (billed as 'a devilish combination of women and hell'). Fast forward a year, and Warren's film 'Terror' appears, featuring a levitating car and a scene where a character is killed by a reel of film. Hmmm
Carole Augustine...sadly she died a year after making the film, aged just 24.
Yes, she does enliven everything she is in. When I first started using the internet, one of the first people I ever reached out to by email was Mel Welles, who was very complementary about her, he adored Rosalba.
It's a reminder of a time when guys could still get laid...despite having hair like a sheep.
She and Ator obviously bonded over the fact that they shared the same hairdresser.
It may not have appeared on her radar, but it played dates at Pennsylvania in 1979, South Carolina in 1977 and Florida in 1976.
Well, the original film was heavily imitated throughout the 1970s, often by exploitation films that were able to push things far further than a major studio picture like Death Wish. The more extreme elements in the sequel come across as Winner reminding the world that he was still boss man when it came to nasty rape revenge movies.
The Love Butcher was released long before DW2, it played as early as 1976.
Cool it Carol...really like that one, though it was apparently a bit of a flop when it was re-released on tape by Salvation video in the mid 1990s.
Although the film clearly had an eye on the US market- given the name American actors in the cast- where chances are the majority of people wouldn't have known how much £5 was in 1968.
Dr. Diabolo sure ain't cheap...yet the woman in the second story could afford that, but didn't have the money to own more than one dress.
Feels strange to be living in a time when you can read a humourous reminisce about the making of Killer's Moon on the Daily Mail's site, and yet the booklet for the current Blu-ray release is full of outrage, finger wagging moralising about the 1970s and tries to link the film with what Savile was up to at the time. Can't we go back to when the tabloid press were the censorious bad guys, and the people who wrote about such movies didn't hold them in complete contempt.
You can read the booklet by freeze framing this YouTube video from about 3:14 onwards
youtu.be/ioo-OhflJnI?si=1-_iBe0ghGpB3L-R
I don't see how Dr Jekyll and Sister Hyde can be regarded as a trans movie, at no point does Ralph Bates' Dr Jekyll wish to change into, or be regarded as female, and only does so as an unwanted side effect of trying to achieve immortality. As Jekyll also becomes a cold blooded killer, after using drugs to change his sex, it hardly holds up to any pro trans interpretation, not that it ever was intended to do so.
She did brief nudity in Quest for the Unicorn and It Hungers as well...but those two films are tricky to see, I think Unicorn is only on dvd in Germany and It Hungers is only on disc in the Netherlands.
Yes that's her. I mainly know of her from her acting roles in Rene Perez movies, but it seems she was also prolific in the art world as well.