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Pete Walker (born 4 July 1939) [1] [2] is an English film director, writer, and producer, specializing in horror and sexploitation films, frequently combining the two. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Biography
Peter Walker (guitarist) (born 1937), American folk guitarist; Peter Walker (dancer), American ballet dancer; Peter Walker (landscape architect), American; Pete Walker (director) (born 1939), British film director; Peter J. Walker (1916–2003), British musician and audio engineer, founder of Quad Electroacoustics
In 1997, Walker signed with the Boston Red Sox but never played for them at the major league level. In 2000, Walker made his way back to the major league level with the Colorado Rockies after signing with them in 1998. In December 2000, Walker once again signed with the New York Mets and played 3 games for them before returning to the minors.
In 1966, Walker's debut LP Rainy Day Raga was released by Vanguard Records, followed by the release of Second Poem in 1968. Walker diverted his attention away from public performance and toward family life at the start of the 1970s. However, he maintained a commitment to the study of his instrument, focusing particularly on flamenco.
The Comeback (also known as The Day the Screaming Stopped or Encore) is a 1978 British psychological horror slasher film [1] directed and produced by Pete Walker and starring Jack Jones, Pamela Stephenson, and David Doyle. [2]
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Deprived of any support from the script this time, Pete Walker's direction, all thump, scream and cut as shadows lurk and doorknobs turn – with each cliché heralded by a triumphant tremolo or bass boom from the score – reduces the whole thing to risible absurdity in which even the studiously nasty murders (Mrs. Wallace killed by a knitting ...
House of Whipcord is a 1974 British exploitation thriller film directed and produced by Pete Walker and starring Barbara Markham, Patrick Barr, Ray Brooks, Ann Michelle, Sheila Keith, Dorothy Gordon, Robert Tayman and Penny Irving. [1]