We use Optical Character Recognition (OCR) during our scanning and processing workflow to make the content of each page searchable. You can view the automatically generated text below as well as copy and paste individual pieces of text to quote in your own work.
Text recognition is never 100% accurate. Many parts of the scanned page may not be reflected in the OCR text output, including: images, page layout, certain fonts or handwriting.
was formed less than two years ago . . . and already eight top features and five supporting features have been completed under its banner.
■jp na
: ON
films already released in the USA:—
i i
1 1
The Battle of the Sexes
_i , , . j y (Continental Distributing)
i ne tmeriamer (Continental Distributing)
“The Boy who stole a Million’’
(Paramount)
YANSTON
films heading your way:— Saturday Night and
Sunday Morning (Continental Distributing) A Taste of Honey” (Continental Distributing)
“Double Bunk”
“Spare the Rod”
“Light Up the Sky”
i t
1 1
(Lion International) (Lion International) (Lion International)
is a co-operative of eleven leading independent British producers with Sir Michael Balcon as Chairman and Maxwell Setton as Managing Director.
Changing Trend in British Cinemagoing
(Continued from page 93)
Butchers has four subjects set for immediate production. Provisional titles; “Bomb in the High Street,” “Staple Girls,” “Kick Back,” and “Crosstrap.”
EROS
At Eros Films, 17 productions are on the year’s schedule, including 11 British-produced pictures, four American, one Italian and one Yugoslavian. Most impressive production scheduled is a Biblical spectacle, “Cain and Abel,” to be filmed in Technirama 70 and Technicolor, with an international cast. Three other pictures are scheduled to be made on the same large scale, in Technirama 70 and Technicolor — “The Long Ships,” an adventure drama; “Oliver Cromwell,” a historical spectacle, and “The Hellions,” starring Anne Aubrey and James Booth.
Other films on the Eros schedule include: “Johnny Nobody,” thriller, filmed in Warwickscope, starring Nigel Patrick, Aldo Ray, Yvonne Mitchell, William Bendix and Cyril Cusack; “His and Hers,” comedy, starring Terry-Thomas, Janette Scott, Wilfrid Hyde White, Nicole Maurey, Kenneth Connor, Joan Sims, Colin Gorden and Kenneth Williams; “Cat and Mouse,” a crime drama, starring Lee Patterson and Anne Sears; “Lies My Father Told Me,” drama, starring Betsy Blair, Harry Brogan and Terry Raven; “Middle of Nowhere,” drama, with John Cassavetes, Elizabeth Sellars and David Farrar; “Rip Van Winkle,” comedy, starring Jamie Uys; and “Ticket to Paradise,” romantic comedy, starring Patricia Dainton and Emrys Jones.
HAMMER
“Brides of Dracula,” thriller, with Peter Cushing, produced by Anthony Hinds and directed by Terence Fisher; “Terror of the Tongs,” adventure drama, with Richard Basehart, produced by Kenneth Hyman and directed by Anthony Bushell; “Visa to Canton,” with Ronald Lewis and Ann Todd, produced and directed by Michael Carreras ; “The Full Treatment,” modem drama, produced and directed by Val Guest; “Sword of Sherwood Forest,” outdoor adventure, with Richard Greene, produced by Sidney Cole and Richard Greene, and directed by Terence Fisher; “Curse of the Werewolf,” costume thriller, produced by Anthony Hinds and directed by Terence Fisher; “Taste of Fear,” modem thriller, produced by Jimmy Sangster and directed by Seth Holt; “Weekend With Lulu,” comedy, produced by Ted Lloyd and directed by John Paddy Carstairs.
Nine other productions in preparation: “Watch It, Sailor!,” comedy, produced by Maurice Cowan and directed by Wolf Rilla; “The Maniac,” thriller, produced by Anthony Hinds and directed by Robert Day; “One More River,” action drama, produced by Michael Cameras and directed by Val Guest; “Quatermass and the Pit,” thriller, produced by Anthony Hinds; “The Brutal Land,” outdoor thriller, produced by Michael Carreras; “The Children of Light” (provisional title), produced by Anthony Hinds, “Blood River,” pirate drama; “The Big Wheel,” thriller, produced by Jimmy Sangster; “The Phantom of the Opera,” thriller, produced by Anthony Hinds; “The Amorous Prawn,” comedy, “The Whites Grew Pale” (provisional title), drama, produced by Michael Carreras; “Build Us a Dam,” drama, produced by Michael Cameras.
RANK
“The League of Gentlemen,” comedythriller, with Jack Hawkins, produced by Michael Relph and directed by Basil Dearden; “Make Mine Mink,” comedy, with Terry-Thomas, produced by Hugh Stewart and directed by Robert Asher; “Doctor in Love,” comedy, in Eastman Color, with Michael Craig, produced by Betty Box and directed by Ralph Thomas: “Never Let Go,”
(Independent Artists), a drama, with Richard Todd, produced by Peter de Sarigny and directed by John Guillermin;
“Man in the Moon,” a space comedy, with Kenneth More, produced by Michael Relph
(Continued on page 122-D)
John Davis
James Cameras
104
BAROMETER Section