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Szaffi (USA titled The Treasure of Swamp Castle) is a 1985 Hungarian -Canadian animated film directed by Attila Dargay. It is based on the 1885 book The Gypsy Baron by Mór Jókai, about the romance between a poor Hungarian aristocrat and a mysterious Romani -looking Turkish girl in the 18th century. Music from Johann Strauss II 's operetta The ...
United States. Language. English. Box office. $266,466 [ 2] Gone in the Night is an 2022 American thriller film, directed by Eli Horowitz, in his directorial debut from a screenplay by Horowitz and Matthew Derby. It stars Winona Ryder, Dermot Mulroney, John Gallagher Jr., Owen Teague and Brianne Tju . It was released in theaters on July 15, 2022.
Night Castle is the fifth studio album by the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. It was released on October 28, 2009 as a double CD with a 60-page booklet illustrated by Greg Hildebrandt , [ citation needed ] and debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard charts and No. 1 on the rock music charts.
Hungarian. Budget. 7 million Ft. Box office. 17.2 million Ft. The Little Fox, known in Hungary as Vuk, is a 1981 Hungarian animated film produced by Pannónia Filmstúdió, based on the novel Vuk by István Fekete. [1] The film is directed by Attila Dargay and written by Attila Dargay, István Imre and Ede Tarbay, and released in December of 1981.
Production company. Hill-Fields Entertainment. Original release. Network. CBS. Release. February 25, 1996. ( 1996-02-25) Gone in the Night is a 1996 American television film about the Jaclyn Dowaliby murder case, with Shannen Doherty and Kevin Dillon as Cynthia and David Dowaliby.
The Night Walker is a 1964 American psychological horror film [ 1][ 2] directed and produced by William Castle, written by Robert Bloch, and starring Robert Taylor, Judith Meredith, Lloyd Bochner and Barbara Stanwyck in her final theatrical film role. It follows the wife of a wealthy inventor who is plagued by increasingly disturbing nightmares ...
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: . Those high hopes that Peter Sasdy might revive the British horror film are rapidly diminishing. And one has to wait a very long time indeed – until the revelatory but over-crowded climax – before catching here a glimpse of the originality of style, inventiveness and visual flair which enriched his Countess Dracula [1971] and Hands of the Ripper [1971].
The film was only shown once in India at a film festival in 1989 to mixed reviews and was never released in theaters in the U.S. Kamani also notes: Devi was bitter about the whole affair. She wrote in 1988: "Christinel [Eliade's widow] has hurt me very badly. She gave permission to a French Co. to film La Nuit Bengali. They came to Calcutta for ...