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Habfürdö (also known as Foam Bath & Bubble Bath in English) is a 1979 Hungarian experimental animated film musical from Pannonia Film Studio directed by renowned painter György Kovásznai. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The Fat Man is a 1951 American film noir crime film directed by William Castle. It is based on a radio drama of the same name, with J. Scott Smart reprising his role as Brad Runyan, a portly detective. The cast includes Rock Hudson and Julie London. Originally released by Universal Pictures, the film is now in the public domain.
A gorgeous French actress named Didi (Elke Sommer) has become more famous for commercials involving bubble baths than for acting.Fed up with the situation, she winds up running away for a while to Oregon, where she encounters a middle-aged married realtor who agrees to secretly assist her and thereby becomes enmeshed in various complications when the realtor and his wacky housekeeper try to ...
Rubbadubbers is a British stop-motion children's television series produced by HIT Entertainment, with animation production by Hot Animation.The series was broadcast in the UK on BBC2 and CBeebies from 2 September 2002 to 14 February 2005.
Thicker than Water is a 1999 film directed by Richard Cummings Jr. and starring a host of rappers and urban entertainers such as Fat Joe, Mack 10, Ice Cube, MC Eiht, Big Pun, and others. The film contains rappers from both the East and the West Coast , as it was made after the end of the East Coast-West Coast feud .
If you've watched "Man in Full," then you know that in the final moments of the show, main characters Charlie Croker (Jeff Daniels) and Raymond Peepgrass (Tom Pelphrey), faceoff in a violent ...
In the film, Page appears twice: in a comic sequence where she is the shared dream of roommates Diamond and Kay, and later as a harem girl who enjoyed an extended bubble bath. Striporama also saw an early appearance by actress Jeanne Carmen, who had a dialogue-free bit part as a streetwalker that circled the Marinette and Andre dance number.
A dark film about shame and self-sabotage, Fat is not a pretty picture. The truthful ones rarely are." [9] James Verniere of The Boston Herald gave the film an A−, noting, "What writer/director Mark Phinney’s semi-autobiographical fiction film 'Fat' lacks in subtlety, it makes up for in brutal honesty, insight and genuine rage." [10]