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Still of the Night is a 1982 American neo-noir [1] psychological thriller film directed by Robert Benton and starring Roy Scheider, Meryl Streep, Joe Grifasi, and Jessica Tandy. It was written by Benton and David Newman. Scheider plays a psychiatrist who falls in love with a woman (Streep) who may be the psychopathic killer of one of his patients.
Still of the Night or In the Still of the Night may refer to: In the Still of the Night, a Czech film; Still of the Night, 1982 psychological thriller film, directed by Robert Benton "Still of the Night" (song), 1987, by Whitesnake "Still of the Night", a song by Quiet Riot from QR III "In the Still of the Night", a 1932 popular song written by ...
1982 United States [8] Slam Dance: Wayne Wang: 1987 United States [8] Someone to Watch Over Me: Ridley Scott 1987 United States, United Kingdom [8] Still of the Night: Robert Benton 1982 United States [8] Stormy Monday: Mike Figgis: 1988 United Kingdom [13] [14] Sudden Impact: Clint Eastwood 1983 United States [8] Tagos ng Dugo: Maryo J. de los ...
Paris-based sales agency Alpha Violet has boarded the international sales for Liryc Dela Cruz’s “Where the Night Stands Still,” which will world premiere in Berlinale’s section for first ...
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"Still of the Night" is a song by English rock band Whitesnake from their seventh studio album, 1987. It was released on 9 March 1987, by EMI Records and Geffen Records as the album's debut single. The single peaked at number sixteen on the UK Singles Chart , number seventy-nine on the US Billboard Hot 100 and number eighteen on the Mainstream ...
Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure – popularly known as Fanny Hill – is an erotic novel by the English novelist John Cleland first published in London in 1748. Written while the author was in debtors' prison in London, [1] [2] it is considered "the first original English prose pornography, and the first pornography to use the form of the novel". [3]
Following its January 1983 re-release under the title Night Warning, critic J. A. Conner of the Santa Cruz Sentinel characterized the film as a "Tennessee Williams version of Psycho" and deemed it an early contender for the worst films of 1983, summarizing: "Night Warning is just another drive-in grindhouse sleazoid mess that somehow wandered ...