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Eaten Alive! ( Italian : Mangiati vivi! — same meaning but with plural expressed) is a 1980 Italian horror film directed by Umberto Lenzi . The film is about a young woman ( Janet Agren ) who is searching for her sister after her abduction by a cult in the jungles of New Guinea .
Eaten Alive (known under various alternate titles, including Death Trap, Horror Hotel, and Starlight Slaughter, and stylized on the poster as Eaten Alive! ) is a 1976 American horror film directed by Tobe Hooper , [ 1 ] and written by Kim Henkel , Alvin L. Fast, and Mardi Rustam .
Umberto Lenzi (6 August 1931 – 19 October 2017) was an Italian film director, screenwriter, and novelist. A fan of film since young age, Lenzi studied at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia and made his first film in 1958 which went unreleased, while his official debut happened in 1961 with Queen of the Seas. Lenzi's films of the 1960s ...
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Paul Rosolie's daredevil debut didn't go so well. The researcher and naturalist covered himself in pig's blood and donned a special suit to get swallowed alive by an anaconda and get it all on camera.
Lai came into her own during the era of Italian cannibal films, playing lead roles in two genre-defining movies: Man from Deep River (1972) by Umberto Lenzi, and Last Cannibal World (1977) by Ruggero Deodato. Additionally, she also had a part in Eaten Alive! (1980), again by Umberto Lenzi, in which one of her scenes from Last Cannibal World was ...
One such study produced data that indicated that boys who spend less than 1.5 hours on the television and playing video games, were 75.4% less likely to be overweight than those who spend more than 1.5 hours. [31] A study conducted in 2011 formalized the association of video game play and an increase in food intake in teens.
Live A Live is a role-playing video game in which the player takes on the role of eight different protagonists through nine scenarios. [1] [2] While each narrative has the same basic mechanics, individual stories have unique gimmicks; these include the use of stealth, a lack of standard battles, or using telepathy to learn new facts to progress the narrative. [3]