Friday, April 30, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER .. NBC.. USA 1972 ..


 

NBC
Presents

A Hallmark Hall Of Fame Presentation.

THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER 

Starring

ORSON WELLES as Sheridan Whiteside
JOAN COLLINS as Lorraine Sheldon
LEE REMICK as Maggie Cutler
DON KNOTTS as DR Bradley
PETER HASKELL as Bert Jefferson
MARY WICKES as Nurse Preen
MARTY FELDMAN as Banjo
MICHAEL GOUGH as Beverly Carlton
EDWARD ANDRWWS as Ernest W Stanley
KIM BRADEN as June Stanley
TUTTE LEMKOW as Zoltan
AL MANCINI as Westcott
ELIZABETH WELCH as Sarah

Directed by Buzz Kulik

(c) 1972  NBC  90 MINS .. COLOR ..

Joan sidles up to Orson with Don Knotts checking if the coast is clear!

When international orator Sheridan Whiteside accepts an invitation to dinner with the Stanley's, a prominent Ohio family, the scene is set for upheavel of the highest order! Whiteside slips on some ice approaching their house and apparently breaks his leg, thus threatening a lawsuit. With Whiteside, is his faithful but tolerant secretary Maggie Cutler, who sparks up a friendship with local newspaper editor Bert Jefferson, to the annoyance of Whiteside, who is now confined to a wheelchair and decides to upset the whole household for devilment and fun! When the doctor calls and tells him his leg is fine, the old goat bribes him to say otherwise, so he can continue with his mischief making! Into the scene comes sex-pot actress Lorraine Sheldon, who is more than a match for Whiteside and the fun and games really begin, with the family regretting inviting - The Man Who Came To Dinner!!


 This 1972 TV production, although set in America, this was filmed in England by ATV as part of the long running "Hallmark Hall Of Fame" strand of movies and specials, which first appeared on American television at Christmas 1951 with the opera, " Amahl and the Night Visitors", and by 1955 it began it's regular series of 90 to 120 minutes movies/specials. "The Man Who Came To Dinner" first appeared on the Broadway stage in 1939 and was written by the legendary duo of George S Kaufman & Moss Hart, as a comedy in three acts. Orson Welles heads the cast in this production and he claimed to have been offered the role of Sheridan in both the stage version and the now classic 1942 film. But he rejected them and Monty Wooley played the part in both. Welles commented that he was glad he had not done either, of the film he said it was "Awful".. 

Joan was asked to play the role of Lorraine Sheldon by director Buzz Kulik, whom she knew since they worked together on the David Janssen thriller "Warning Shot". Joan was delighted to take the role as a wonderful cast was assembled. However much as she was delighted to be working with the legendary Welles, she was also in awe of his great presence. However as Joan recalled, Orson was not the easiest to work with..

" Orson and I were rehearsing one scene which included a longish speech, which he had to preform to me. I was standing on my correct mark when all of a sudden he ended the speech with ... ' I cant read the rest of the lines because Miss Collins is standing in front of the damn cue cards!'
I was mortified! 'But I am standing where I am supposed to be!'
It was pointless arguing as Orson was the star and made sure everyone knew it, even poor Don Knotts had his best scenes cut, as not to upstage the great Welles!"

Joan perfects her look before shooting..

The cast rehearsed for three weeks and Orson insisted on reading all his lines from large cue cards which two students from RADA had to hold up for ages..Welles was also fond of red wine as he consumed endless cups of the stuff..Taping of the show was slated to last only three days but as Welles was difficult and still consuming the red wine even during taping, the shoot lasted almost six days. Joan was delighted when Kitty Carlisle paid a visit to the set and told her how she loved Joan's performance as Lorraine and she had seen every actress who played the part since it's original run from Carol Goodner in 1939 to Ann Sheridan in 1942 and other over the years... Actress Mary Wickes who plays Nurse Preen, also appeared in the original stage version and the film playing the same character...

Joan on set ready for her close up

Although the production has a stagey feel, the excellent cast makes it an interesting view and Joan is in sparkling form as the selfish, vain Lorraine, with the late Lee Remick as Maggie, the complete opposite in temperament to the vampish Miss Sheldon.... This has not been screened on tv for many years, althought The Paley Centre screened it as part of an Orson Welles season in 2015.. It is not available on dvd, I was luck to get a copy of it years ago and it's well worth viewing if you happen to come across it!

Rare shot of Joan with producer Sam Denoff



REVIEW :

THE NEW YORK TIMES -

Last night's “Hallmark Hall of Fame” production, pre sented at 8:30 on the Na tional Broadcasting Compa ny network, was “based on the play” called “The Man Who Came to Dinner.” The play, which opened on Broad way in 1939 and starred Monty Woolley as Sheridan Whiteside, was written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart. The TV production, which starred Orson Welles, was updated by Bill Persky and Sam Denoff, the special's producers. That was its first mistake.

Rare shot of Joan on set with Orson

The play comes out of the once popular American tradition of “debunking” comedy. Sheridan Whiteside is a critic, and part of the origi nal fun was knowing that the characterization was based, none too subtly, on Alexan der Woollcott. Whiteside is the compleat egomaniac, humbly bamboozling his pub lic and mercilessly dominat ing anyone and anything un fortunate enough to stray near his private life.

In this new production, Whiteside remains a critic, but now he is also a TV per sonality, a strong threat to Johnny Carson as “televi sion's one‐man cultural revo lution.” And with Whiteside confined after an accident to the home of the Stanley fam ily in Ohio, the comedy con tinues to rely on a rapid‐fire succession of wisecracks. The single, spurious element of sophistication is attempted through the device of name‐ dropping.

The phone rings, and it's Princess Margaret from Lon don. The dazzled Mrs. Stan ley (Marcella Markham) does a reflex curtsy. The mousy doctor (Don Xnotts) is dis missed by his ferocious pa tient as a “road‐company Marcus Welby.” Whiteside orders that his accident be reported to “Spiro—he'll pass the word to Sinatra.” Sitting in his wheelchair and plot ting new schemes, the critic cautions, “Shh, Ironside at work.”

Sometimes the updating worked. More often, it didn't, especially when Mrs. Stanley anticipated that “he may even read ‘Valley of the Dolls' to us” or when White side lapsed into singing “Bye, Bye, Miss American Pie.”




The characters surround ing Whiteside were given uniformly effective perform ances. Lee Remick‐ as White side's super‐secretary and Joan Collins as a super‐sex‐ pot actress were splendid. And Peter Haskell, Edward Andrews and Mary Wickes (again repeating the nurse role that she did in the orig inal stage production) were outstanding.

And then there was Orson Welles. That would seem to he the production's second mistake. Following several outstanding stage and film achievements in his early career, Mr. Welles has ac quired through the years an immensity both of girth and of reputation, which itself could do with considerable debunking. Consider merely the overacted, overproduced, overbearing productions of Shakespeare and Kafka com mitted to film in his name.

As Sheridan Whiteside, Mr. Welles emerges less the amusing egocentric than a monstrous fake, Part of the problem stems from the di rector, Buzz Kulick, who keeps the actor in domi neering closeup. Whiteside is funny in context. Alone and in close quarters, he tends to be suffocating.

In addition, comedy is not one of Mr. Welles's stronger points. His timing is dull and heavyhanded. Take a simple line. Whiteside hisses at his nurse: “Where do you disap pear all the time, my Lady Nausea?” With Welles, the “great actor” syndrome takes over: “Where do you disap pear all the time (pause), my Lady (pause) Nausea (voice rising to a shrill pitch on last syllable)?” The laugh is buried in the reading.

At its best—Whiteside's Christmas Eve TV message of peace as chaos erupts in the Stanley home—“The Man Who ‘Came to Dinner” hit its proven farce‐comedy stride. Unfortunately, too much of the rest consisted of stum bling.

Thursday, April 29, 2021

PRESS UPDATE : PAGE SIX .. APRIL 28TH 2021 ..

 




Cara Delevingne and Paris Jackson cozy up at Joan Collins’ Oscars bash




Joan with Eugenio Lopez

Paris Jackson and Cara Delevingne cozied up together at an intimate Oscars party hosted by Dynasty icon Joan Collins and famed literary agent Alan Nevins.

The supermodel and the music scion — who sparked dating rumors back in 2018 — got glammed up on Sunday night for the starry dinner at the Beverly Hills home of art collector Eugenio Lopez.

“Cara is one of Joan Collins’ god-daughters,” said Nevins, the president of Renaissance Literary & Talent. “She and Paris sat together and were friendly with everyone and they were quite stunning, I have to say.” 

Cara & Paris
Guests included Michael Feinstein and Gordon Sondland, Donald Trump’s former Ambassador to the European Union.

Also on hand was Suzanne de Passe, who helped develop the Jackson 5 in their early career.

“They lived with her when they first came to LA,” Nevins said. “So Suzanne and Paris had a little chat together.”

He added, “They were pleasant – there’s was nothing outward to show that they were ‘together’ or anything but friends out together.” 

Joan with Brandon Davis, Nancy Davis, Alan Nevins, Barbara Davis 


The party was a tribute to Irving Paul “Swifty” Lazar, a powerhouse talent agent and dealmaker who represented both movie stars and authors and who hosted a regular starry Oscar bash up to his death in 1993.

Joan with Swifty & Kitty Carlisle
They had planned to throw the bash at Wolfgang Puck’s Spago, but the party ended up being too large for COVID-19 restrictions. Nevins said Lopez — the owner of the largest South American art collection in the world — stepped in and offered his home for the soirĂ©e.

Other guests chatting up a very glamourous Collins included chef Joey Santos — with whom Nevins hosts the podcast “Two Guys from Hollywood” — activist Irina Medavoy, Alice Bamford and Ann Eysenring, the owners of renowned organic Malibu farm One Gun Ranch.

Nevins added, “We followed all the current Covid restrictions and had the party outdoors and everyone who attended were fully vaccinated. It was beautifully planned by an event coordinator overseen by Joan and myself and it was great fun.

“And after dinner Michael Feinstein sat at the piano and played some tunes for a singalong.”



Monday, April 26, 2021

EVENT ALERT : LADY BOSS : THE JACKIE COLLINS STORY .. TRIBECA FESTIVAL .. JUNE 10TH WESTSIDE PIER ..


LADY BOSS: THE JACKIE COLLINS STORY..

| UK | 96 MINUTES                          Screening Tribeca Festival  June 10th 5PM Westside Pier
                                                            At Home Screening   June 11th 6pm 

DIRECTOR                        
Laura Fairrie
PRODUCER
John Battsek, Lizzie Gillett
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Lynda Hall
COMPOSER
Matt
EDITOR
Joe Carey
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER
Courtney Sexton, Amy Entelis, Mark Bell, Stuart Ford, Andrew Ruhemann

Laura Fairrie directed the feature documentary Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins Story for CNN Films, BBC, and AGC Studios. She also directed The Battle for Barking, an observational feature documentary about the far-right in Britain, which screened at The Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival.

In 1968, Jackie Collins published her first novel The World Is Full of Married Men to remarkable success and immediate scandal. Over the next decades, Collins would go on to build an empire writing books where female agency came first. Jackie Collins’ women were unapologetic about their needs and their sexual desire, and to her devoted readers, Collins became a symbol of the effortless power that defined her heroines. 


In her admiring documentary, Laura Fairrie seeks out the real Jackie Collins behind the untouchable icon. Piecing together hidden treasures from Collins’ personal archives with candid interviews and excerpts from Collins’s work, Lady Boss: The Jackie Collins Story reveals the determined, guarded person Collins was to her family and friends—including her sister, actress Joan Collins. From her teen years among the stars of 1950’s Hollywood to the worldwide fame she achieved on her own terms, Jackie Collins’ life can seem like a fairy tale. Lady Boss pays tribute to those fantastic memories while shedding light on her moments of pain, which together shaped Collins into a one-in-a-million storyteller. —Cara Cusumano

PRESS CONTACT
Jennifer Dargan
CNN Films / WarnerMedia
Washington, DC 20002
Phone: 202 515 2950
jennifer.dargan@turner.com

 

Sunday, April 25, 2021

TV ALERT : LORRAINE .. ITV1 .. MONDAY APRIL 26TH 2021 .. 9AM!

 

Joan with Lorraine in 2017


Just to mention that Joan will be Lorraine Kelly's special guest on Monday morning, the 26th April to chat about the Oscars which had just finished in Hollywood. So don't miss true Hollywood glamour to start the week from 9am on ITV 1!

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! FEAR IN THE NIGHT... HAMMER FILMS .. UK 1972 ..


 ANGLO EMI FILM DISTRIBUTORS

PRESENT
A HAMMER PRODUCTION

FEAR IN THE NIGHT

JUDY GEESON as Peggy Heller
RALPH BATES as Robert Heller
JOAN COLLINS as Molly Carmichael
PETER CUSHING as Michael Carmichael
GILLIAN LIND as Mrs Beamish
JAMES COSSINS as Doctor
JOHN BROWN as 1st Policeman
BRIAN GRELLIS as 2nd Policeman
JIMMY GARDNER as Psychiatrist

Assistant Director - Ted Morley  Director of Photography - Arthur Grant  Art Director - Don Picton       Music by John McCabe  Screenplay by Jimmy Sangster & Michael Syson  Edited by Peter Weatherley
                              Produced by Jimmy Sangster     Directed by Jimmy Sangster

(c) 1972 HAMMER  94 MINS COLOR


Having only recently recovered from a nervous breakdown, Peggy Heller is looking forward to her new life, with her new husband Robert. But has Peggy really recovered? Is the assailant with the artificial arm, real or a figment of her imagination? Can the sinister Michael Carmichael be trusted and what of his stern wife Molly? Left all alone and in the dark.. Has she reason to feel Fear In The Night!!


"Fear In The Night" was one of the last of Hammer's cycle of suspense thrillers, in the style of "Les Diabolique" and "Psycho". It also proved to be the last film for Hammer, by their most prolific director and writer Jimmy Sangster. It was the films star Ralph Bates, 5th film for Hammer and his 2nd for Sangster, the other been "Horror of Frankenstein".  The script for "Fear in the Night" had been knocking around the studio since the 60's. It had begun life as a story called "Brainstorm" and went through various stages. Before it finally became "Fear", it had been called "The Claw" and had been set on a houseboat on the Thames. Sangster decided it needed a different angle and gave it to a friend, Michael Syson who reset it in a boy's boarding school. This relocation was enough to get the green light from Hammer bosses to film. Sangster was delighted with his cast and described the film as "The story of a young girl, primed to commit murder!"

 Joan on set filming her final scene

Peter Cushing was still mourning the death of his wife Helen, he had previously pulled out of Hammer's "Blood From The Mummy's Tomb" due to his grief, this was his first major role since her death. Joan was pregnant at the time of shooting the film, but she had failed to mention her condition when accepting the role! She had not said a word to the producers and the news of her pregnancy only came to light when the wardrobe mistress complained that Joan's costumes failed to fit! She asked the producers to tell Joan to stop eating! Joan eventually admitted to her condition and concessions were made!
 Joan said of her role.

" It's a marvellous script.. I love being the villian of the piece, instead of the heroine.. A real challenge!"

Rare shots of Joan doing her make up on set

Judy Geeson had just finished the classic "Ten Rillington Place" and had also co-starred with Joan in "The Executioner", while Ralph Bates would go on to star with Joan in the 1975 shocker "I Dont Want To Be Born". Hammer at that time were not doing too well at the box office, so they decided to release their films as double bills to try and generate better box office returns. "Fear in the Night" was released with another psychological thriller,"Straight on till Morning" which starred Rita Tushingham. But even a Hammer double bill failed to set the box office alight and Jimmy Sangster finished his lengthy run with the company. Box offie hit or not, "Fear in the Night" is a worthwhile thriller and it has an excellant cast, with Joan on fine form as the icy villainess!

Joan on set 






'Fear in the Night' is currently available on blu-ray from Studio Canal and you can order at the following link!








Saturday, April 24, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : TALES FROM THE CRYPT .. 20TH CENTURY FOX .. USA 1972 ..



20TH CENTURY FOX
Presents
A Metromedia Presentation
An Amicus Production
A Cinerama Release


TALES FROM THE CRYPT

Starring

JOAN COLLINS as Joanne Clayton
PETER CUSHING as Grimsdyke
ROY DOTRICE as Charles Gregory
RICHARD GREENE as Ralph Jason
IAN HENDRY as Carl Maitland
PATRICK MAGEE as George Carter
BARBARA MURRAY as Enid Jason
NIGEL PATRICK as William Rogers
ROBIN PHILLIPS as James Elliot
SIR RALPH RICHARDSON as The Crypt Keeper
MARTIN BODDEY as Richard Clayton
CHLOE FRANKS as Carol Clayton
GEOFFREY BAYLDON as Guide
OLIVER MCGREEVY as Maniac Santa
SUSAN DENNY as Wife
ANGELA GRANT as Susan
DAVID MARKHAM as Father
ROBERT HUTTON as Neighbour
FRANK FORSYTH as Tramp

 Assistant Director - Peter Saunders  Director of Photography - Norman Warwick    
                            Art Director - Tony Curtis   Music by Douglas Gamely     Screenplay by Milton Subotsky
From the Comic Strips by William Gaines   Edited by Teddy Darvas 
                                            Executive Producer - Charles W Fries  Produced by Milton Subotsky
                       Directed by Freddie Francis

(c) 1972  FOX  92 MINS  COLOR



Whilst taking a tour of the Catacombs, five people are seperated from the group and find themselves trapped in a large chamber. Soon after they are joined by the mysterious Crypt Keeper and thus begins their journey into the unknown! Each in turn is shown the future..Or is it?

"All Through The House"                                                                                                                     Joanne Clayton is seen to murder her husband on Christmas Eve.. Only to become a victim herself!

"Reflection of Death"
Carl Maitland is having an affair and leaves his wife, only to become involved in a car crash with horrific results!

"Poetic Justice"
James Elliot, out of his own greed, torments an old neighbour who commits suicide, but returns to exact revenge!

"Wish You Were Here"
Ralph Jason and his wife Enid are given three wishes, but with each wish comes a never ending nightmare!

" Blind Alley's"
William Rogers, the new superintendent at a home for the blind, has no mercy for his residents and deprives them of proper food or heating. But the blind men plan their revenge, with Rogers to suffer a terrible fate!

The Crypt Keeper finishes his tales and tells all five to leave. As they depart, they begin to realise that the tales they have been told was their own pasts and now they are destined for the fires of hell!!



 "Tales From The Crypt" is now regarded as a horror classic and is one of the most popular films produced by classic horror studio, Amicus. The company also gave us many similar films such as, "Dr Terror's House Of Horror's", "Asylum", "House That Dripped Blood", "From Beyond The Grave", "Torture Garden" and a follow up to "Tales From The Crypt" called "Vault of Horror". Joan's segment is one of the best and she carries the whole episode herself, as the icy murderess, who kills her husband on Christmas Eve. Joan was paid £10,000 for her one week stint on the film, which was shot at Shepperton Studios, with locations around London, using some of it's eerie mansions, including the old Guiness house. Director Freddie Francis filled the house with a quarter of a million dollars worth of antiques. When producer Subotsky found out, he hired security guards to watch the set. Highgate cemetery was used for he opening sequences, but only after the producers had to cut through endless red tape. The reason was that Karl Marx is buried there and officials did not want the grounds crawling with people.

Joan with Ian Hendry, Richard Greene & Robin Phillips

The production was Freddie Francis's seventh film for Amicus and his fifth with star Peter Cushing, who ended up a ghoul in his segment and had to spend several hours in makeup every day to get the look. 

Peter commented at the time...

" When I saw myself in it.. I was horrified!"

Peter played the role of a widower in the film, which was timely, as his own wife Helen had died of cancer the year before, which had caused him to withdraw from Hammer's "Blood From The Mummy's Tomb". He had originally been slated to play the Richard Greene role in "Tales From The Crypt", but felt he could play the Grimsdyke part much better.


Sir Ralph Richardson, who was seventy at the time, came to the set on his motor-bike, much to the protests of his wife! The film received an X rating in the UK at the time and was cut by a few minutes to gain this cert. The most notable cuts are in the episode, "Wish You Were Here", as Richard Greene's intestines are on view!
 Joan was popular with the cast and crew and earned these comments.
Milton Subotsky..
"Joan was very co-operative. She stayed overtime and was no problem at all."


Freddie Francis..
" Joan was very professional and very good. She is that type, who when she comes on the set and gets in front of the camera, that's her camera! It is not a selfishness.If you offer yourself as a star to a film, you should project yourself into that camera!"



Joan would work with Freddie on another portmanteau film called "Tales That Witness Madness", a few years later. During the shoot it took her six takes to murder her husband (Martin Boddey), she quipped to the crew.

"It's getting more and more difficult to murder your husband these days!"

French press card

Review :

NEW YORK TIMES..

"If "Tales From The Crypt", had any style what so ever, the philandering husband's dream would not come through.. The blind men would probably fail and we might find ourselves rooting for Joan, in her extremity, despite her momentary lapse in manners! Unfortunately the only style exhibited by Freddie Francis and Milton Subotsky, is in their dumb appreciation for ancient plot devices and silly supernatural effects."

Despite the mixed reviews, the film is a cult classic and is still an entertaining journey into the unknown!



'Tales From The Crypt' is available on dvd from Final Cut Entertainment in a stand alone release, you can also get a blu-ray which pairs 'Crypt' with it's follow up film 'Vaul of Horror' .. You can order the dvd release at the following link..


Friday, April 23, 2021

CELEBRATING 70 YEARS! : QUEST FOR LOVE .. RANK ORGANISATION .. UK 1971 ..

 


THE RANK ORGANISATION
Presents

A Peter Rogers Production

QUEST FOR LOVE

JOAN COLLINS as Ottilie / Tracy Fletcher
TOM BELL as Colin Trafford
DENHOLM ELLIOTT as Tom Lewis
LAURENCE NAISMITH as Sir Harry Larnstein
LYN ASHLEY as Jennifer
JULIET HARMER as Geraldine Lambert
NEIL MCCALLUM as Jimmy
TRUDI VAN DOORN as Sylvia
JEREMY CHILD as Dougie Raynes
RAY MCANALLY as Jack Kahn
SIMON WARD as Jeremy
JOHNNY BRIGGS as Club Barman
SAM KYDD as Taximan
GERALDINE MOFFAT as Stella
DAVID WESTON as Johnny Prescott
DUDLEY FOSTER as Grimshaw
ANGUS MACKAY as Dr Rankin
BERNARD HORSFALL as Telford
PHILIP STONE as Mason
JOHN HALLAM as Jonathan Keene
JOAN BENHAM as Helpful Neighbour
ANDREW SACHS as TV Announcer

 Assistant Director - Bert Batt  Director of Photography - Ernest Steward  Art Director - Robert Jones
              Music by Eric Rogers   Ottilie's Theme by Peter Rogers   Edited by Roy Watts
         Screenplay by Terence Feely    From the Short Story "Random Quest" by John Wyndham
          Executive Producer - Peter Rogers  Produced by Peter Eton  Directed by Ralph Thomas

(c) 1971   RANK   87 MINS  COLOR


When physicist Colin Trafford's latest experiment ends in an explosion, he somehow finds himself in a parallel world! In his own world his marriage to the beautiful Ottilie is under strain and heading for divorce. But Colin is desperate to find Tracy, an air-hostess, who is the exact image of Ottilie and who he believes is dying! It's a race against time on a Quest For Love!


This was the first of two films Joan made for her old bosses at The Rank Organisation. The film had originally been cast with Britt Ekland, but it finally went into production with Joan. This film and the next "Revenge", were both produced by Peter Rogers although 'Revenge' was released before 'Quest' The original story "Random Quest", by acclaimed sci-fi writer John Wyndham, was first filmed by the BBC as an episode of the series "Out of the Unknown". The role of Colin was played by Keith Barron, while Tracy Reed played Ottilie. Apparently this episode was destroyed by the BBC and no longer exists. However in 2006 they made another version under the "Random Quest" title, starring Samuel West and Kate Ashfield. 

Joan checks her image on set.


The film is one of the more intelligent science fiction films of the era and Joan looks sensational in it. She said of her role in the production.

" With Rank, it had been fifteen years since my "Coffee Bar Jezebel" roles, now I am playing leading ladies, sometimes if I was lucky, with a touch of humour or evil thrown in!"

Press item on both 'Quest For Love' & 'Revenge'


Reviews for the film were good..

THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH..
" Quest For Love. A luscious, cliffhanging romance, threads through John Wyndham's eerie science fiction story!"

VARIETY..

" Peter Rogers presents an enthralling drama of a man who lives two existences in different times, putting one experience to advantage in the other. Raplh Thomas has coaxed most sympathetic performances from an admirable cast. Joan Collins has rarely been better..She is beautifully gowned throughout and looks gorgeous. She acts with warmth and has a fine foil in Tom Bell."

Rank Press Sheet..

Promo Fashion Shot
DAILY EXPRESS
" Tom Bell is quite bewildered as he plays a scientist whose experiments goes wrong. After waking up with a bump on the head, he finds life has changed! The theory of this tale has more holes than a trawling net! But Joan Collins as his wife looks lovely.. No matter what world she is in!

Italian video sleeve


2012 dvd sleeve..

'Quest For Love' has been available for many years on dvd, A 2011 region 1 USA release from Scorpion is no longer available. However a region 2 uk release in 2012 from Strawberry Meia still available.. You can order this release here!




Tuesday, April 20, 2021

PREMIERE ALERT : LADY BOSS : THE JACKIE COLLINS STORY ... TRIBECA FESTIVAL .. JUNE 2021 ..



Delighted to announce that the long awaited documentary film about the life of the much missed fabulous Jackie Collins will get it's premiere at this years Tribeca Festival which runs from June  9th to 20th and which this year celebrates it's 20th anniversary.  Watch this space for more details on this exciting new release from Passion
Pictures & CNN Films, directed by Laurie Fairrie....