Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tentacles (Italian: Tentacoli) is a 1977 horror-thriller film directed by Ovidio G. Assonitis and starring John Huston, Shelley Winters, Bo Hopkins, Cesare Danova, Delia Boccardo and Henry Fonda. When numerous people go missing in a seaside resort town, a reporter discovers that a rampaging giant octopus is terrorizing the coast.
Tentacles: Ovidio G. Assonitis: John Huston, Shelley Winters, Bo Hopkins: Italy United States [38] Tintorera: René Cardona Jr. Hugo Stiglitz, Andrés García, Fiona Lewis: Mexico [38] The Uncanny: Denis Héroux: Catherine Begin Canada United Kingdom [39] Watch Me When I Kill: Antonio Bido: Franco Citti, Fernando Cerulli, Sylvia Kramer Italy ...
Felicity Ama Agyemang (born 15 August 1977), [1] also known as Nana Ama McBrown, is a Ghanaian actress, TV show hostess, and music composer. [2] She rose to prominence for her role in a television series titled Tentacles. Later, she found mainstream success following her role in the Twi-language movies "Asoreba" and "Kumasi Yonko". [3]
The version of the film I’m reviewing is the one that premiered on the Sci-Fi Channel, it didn’t really seem to have much that needed cutting out in the gore and profanity department and it doesn’t appear there is any nudity that needed to be cut out either, which is too bad because again, Margaret Cash is quite hot."
Cuttlefish with two tentacles and eight arms. In zoology, a tentacle is a flexible, mobile, and elongated organ present in some species of animals, most of them invertebrates. In animal anatomy, tentacles usually occur in one or more pairs. Anatomically, the tentacles of animals work mainly like muscular hydrostats. Most forms of tentacles are ...
Natural horror is a subgenre of horror films that features natural forces, [1] typically in the form of animals or plants, that pose a threat to human characters.. Though killer animals in film have existed since the release of The Lost World in 1925, [2] two of the first motion pictures to garner mainstream success with a "nature run amok" premise were The Birds, directed by Alfred Hitchcock ...
The screenplay was written by Martin Cruz Smith, Steve Shagan and Bud Shrake, based on the 1977 novel of the same title by Smith. The movie's tagline is "Day belongs to man, but night is theirs!" It was one of many imitators of the 1975 film Jaws. Such movies about animals gone wild were popular in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
For the scenes where a single tentacle is seen moving on screen, Harryhausen used a large model tentacle instead of employing the complete stop-motion animation model. Some of the later Golden Gate bridge scenes employ a shooting miniature of a bridge support; these were composited in post-production over live footage of the real support (this ...