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This is a list of films which placed number one at the weekly box office in the United States during 1974 per Variety. The data was based on grosses from 20 to 24 key cities and therefore, the gross quoted may not be the total that the film grossed nationally in the week.
The film had a very limited release theatrically in the United States by Cinerama Releasing Corporation, [7] playing on New York's 42nd street in 1974. [8] The film was released on VHS by various video companies in the 1980s including Prism Entertainment. [9] A transfer to DVD and Blu-ray was released on September 9, 2014, by Scorpion Releasing.
October 1, 1974 () The Disappearance of Flight 412 is a 1974 made-for-television science fiction drama film starring Glenn Ford , Bradford Dillman , David Soul and Guy Stockwell . [ 1 ] The film was shown as an NBC World Premiere Movie in 1974.
Karagarga ("black crow" in Turkish [1]), often abbreviated KG, is a members-only Internet forum, BitTorrent tracker, and file sharing archive used primarily for sharing and downloading films considered to be obscure or rare.
99 and 44/100% Dead!, released in the UK as Call Harry Crown, is a 1974 American action comedy film directed by John Frankenheimer and starring Richard Harris. [1] The title is a play on an advertising slogan for Ivory soap. In the film, a professional contract killer is hired to take part in a conflict between two rival crime bosses. The ...
Writing in The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia, academic Peter Dendle described the film as having "crusty acting and hokey dialogue". [1] In his book Mixed Blood Couples , film critic Steven Jay Schneider suggests that the choice of making French's and Michelle's characters cousins is an excuse to avoid depicting miscegenation .
The Questor Tapes is a 1974 American made-for-television sci-fi drama film about an android (portrayed by Robert Foxworth) with incomplete memory tapes who is searching for his creator and his purpose. Conceived by Gene Roddenberry, who is credited as executive consultant, the script is credited to Roddenberry and fellow Star Trek alumnus Gene ...
When the MPAA gave the film an "R" rating, Scott blasted the decision and urged exhibitors to defy it by running the movie unrated. [2] Scott strongly disagreed with the MPAA's position that incest was a "major" theme of the film and said he was "appalled" that his movie was given the same rating as films like Candy Stripe Nurses and The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. [2]