Rollover
I think those were called "Fox Photo." The tagline was: "Fox Photo, quick as a fox."
Jaws was a groundbreaking film in many ways. It was the first film to depict non-ficticious, aquatic creatures in violent confrontation with man. When it was first screened there were reports of people running from the cinimas in fright, and an irrational fear of water developed across America. People were known to be afraid to sit on the toilet or turn on a tap (presumably incase a giant man-eating shark came out of it!) European screenings produced a less hysterical reaction but a reaction nontheless. If memory serves it was also the first film to gross over 1million U.S dollars in the box office on its premier night.
during his dictatorship, Nazi leaders, using propoganda, used Germany's film industry to make byast pro-Nazi films, fictional drama's, and "documentary's" which were selectively spooled into movie theaters. They were designed to make the people envy the cause.
Netflix has it.
whick is mgr 50th film
The film industry is alive and well.
Young Arabs - 2008 was released on: USA: 18 June 2008 (Silverdocs Film Festival)
Planet of the Arabs - 2005 was released on: USA: 26 January 2005 (Sundance Film Festival) USA: 21 April 2005 (Portland Documentary and Experimental Film Festival) USA: 22 April 2005 (Indianapolis International Film Festival)
American Colonies Collapse of the Bee - 2009 was released on: USA: 2009 (Charlotte Film Festival)
14 Americans Directions of the 1970s - 1981 was released on: USA: September 1981 (New York Film Forum)
Yes , the two were very popular because of the two film's appeal to those who favored violence in film .
The Last Tycoon
The film Los Adolescentes (called The Adolescents) was a Mexican film that was released in 1968. It was almost nominated for an Oscar, but did not get nominated. There is also another Mexican film released in the late 1970s (listed anywhere from 1975 to 1978) called Los Adolescentes.
Surfactant
The Phantom Tollbooth is probably the movie you are thinking of.
Star Wars: A New Hope
Famous film critic Roger Ebert was born Roger Joseph Ebert on June 18, 1942. He used the pseudonym Reinhold Timme as a writer for the 1970s film "Up."