Directed by Mel Welles
Produced by Mel Welles
Screenplay by Edward di Lorenzo
Story by Dick Randall
Starring Joseph Cotten
Rosalba Neri
Paul Muller
Peter Whiteman
Music by Alessandro Alessandroni
Cinematography Riccardo Pallottini
Edited by Cleofe Conversi
Production Condor International Films, Alexia Films
Distributed by Alexia
Release date 22 October 1971 (Italy)
Running time 99 minutes
Country Italy
Budget under $200,000
Box office ₤139.683 million
Directed by Roger Corman
Produced by Roger Corman, Charles Hannawalt
Screenplay by Robert Towne
Starring Betsy Jones-Moreland
Antony Carbone
Robert Towne
Music by Ronald Stein
Cinematography Jacques R. Marquette
Edited by Anthony Carras
Distributed by Filmgroup
Release date August 5, 1960 (United States)
Running time 71 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Directed by Dave Fleischer
Animation directors
Seymour Kneitel
Willard Bowsky
Tom Palmer
Grim Natwick
William Henning
Roland Crandall
Thomas Johnson
Robert Leffingwell
Frank Kelling
Winfield Hoskins
Orestes Calpini
Produced by Max Fleischer
Written by Dan Gordon
Cal Howard
Tedd Pierce
Edmond Seward
Isadore Sparber
Based on Gulliver's Travels
by Jonathan Swift
Starring Pinto Colvig
Jack Mercer
Sam Parker
Jessica Dragonette
Lanny Ross
Tedd Pierce
Music by Victor Young
Leo Robin (songs)
Ralph Rainger (songs)
Al Neiburg (songs)
Winston Sharples (songs)
Sammy Timberg (songs)
Production Fleischer Studios
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
Release date December 22, 1939
Running time 76 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $700,000
Box office $3.27 million
Gulliver's Travels is a 1939 American cel-animated Technicolor feature film produced by Max Fleischer and directed by Dave Fleischer for Fleischer Studios. Released to cinemas in the United States on December 22, 1939 by Paramount Pictures, the story is a very loose adaptation of Jonathan Swift's 18th century novel of the same name, specifically the first part which tells the story of Lilliput and Blefuscu, and centers around an explorer who helps a small kingdom who declared war after an argument over a wedding son
Credits
The Filmgroup
presents
Mamie Van Doren
Mary Marr
Paige Lee
in
Voyage to the Planet
of Prehistoric Women
with
Aldo Romani
Margot Hartman
Irene Orton
Pam Helton
Frankie Smith
James David
Judy Cowart
and
Roberto Martelli
Robin Smith
Cathie Reimer
Ralph Phillips
Murray Gerard
Adele Valentine
Production Manager
Gilles De-Turenne
Director of Photography
Flemming Olsen
Production Coordinator
Polly Platt
Special Effects
Giovanni de Palma
Don Jones
Gary Kent
Walter Robles
Art Director
Vittorio Ferroni
Costune Designer
Alice Mitchell
Editor
Bob Collins
Sound Editor
Burt Campbell
Costumes Executed by
Maureen of Hollywood
Hair Styles
Vergee
Make-up
Mary Jo Weir
Color by
Pathe
Special Props
Wah Chang
Re-recording
Producers Sound Service
Titles
Group One
Narrator
Peter Bogdanovich
Copyright 1967 by The Filmgroup, Inc.
Music Composed and Conducted by
Keith Benjamin
Screenplay
Henry Ney
Producer
Norman D. Wells
Director
Derek Thomas
A powerful cosmic force is turning Earth women into queen bees who kill men by wearing them out sexually.
Directed by Denis Sanders
Written by Nicholas Meyer
Sylvia Schneble
Starring William Smith
Victoria Vetri
Anitra Ford
Music by Charles Bernstein
Cinematography Gary Graver
Distributed by Centaur
Dimension Pictures
Release date June 1, 1973
Running time 85 min
Country United States
Language English
Directed by Ed Wood
Produced by Ed Wood
Written by Ed Wood
Starring Gregory Walcott
Bela Lugosi
Maila Nurmi
Lyle Talbot
Narrated by Criswell
Cinematography William C. Thompson
Edited by Ed Wood
Production Reynolds Pictures, Inc
Distributed by Valiant Pictures
Release date July 22, 1959
Running time 80 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $60,000
Bela Lugosi's last Movie
Plan 9 from Outer Space is a 1959 American independent science-fiction horror film written, produced, directed, and edited by Ed Wood; starring Gregory Walcott, Mona McKinnon, Tor Johnson, and "Vampira" (Maila Nurmi); and narrated by Criswell. It also posthumously bills Bela Lugosi as a guest-star (silent footage of the actor had actually been shot by Wood for another, unfinished film just prior to Lugosi's death in August 1956). Other guest-stars are Hollywood veterans Lyle Talbot, who claimed that he never refused any acting job, and former cowboy star Tom Keene. Plan 9 from Outer Space was released theatrically in 1959 by Distributors Corporation of America, which was credited as Valiant Pictures at the time.
The film's storyline concerns extraterrestrials who seek to stop humanity from creating a doomsday weapon that could destroy the universe. The aliens implement "Plan 9", a scheme to resurrect the Earth's dead, referred to as "ghouls". By causing chaos, the aliens hope the crisis will force humanity to listen to them; otherwise the aliens will destroy mankind with armies of the undead. The film was originally developed under the title Grave Robbers from Outer Space, but its financial backers objected to this title, considering it sacrilegious, and it was retitled Plan 9 from Outer Space prior to production.
Directed by John Hayes
Produced by Daniel Cady (producer)
Written by David Chase (screenplay)
John Hayes (screen treatment)
Based on The Still Life by David Chase
Starring William Smith as James Eastman
Michael Pataki as Caleb Croft/Professor Lockwood
Lyn Peters as Anne Arthur
Diane Holden as Anita Jacoby
Lieux Dressler as Olga
Eric Mason as Lieutenant Panzer
Jay Adler as Old Zack
Jay Scott as Paul
William Guhl as Sergeant Duffy
Margaret Fairchild as Miss Fenwick
Carmen Argenziano as Sam
Frank Whiteman
Abbi Henderson as Carol Moskowitz
Inga Neilsen
Lindis Guinness
Kitty Vallacher as the unwilling mother
Music by Jaime Mendoza-Nava
Cinematography Paul Hipp
Edited by John Hayes
Production Millennium Productions
Distributed by Entertainment Pyramid
Release date August 23, 1972
Running time 95 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Directed by Ford Beebe
Saul A. Goodkind
Produced by Henry MacRae
Screenplay by George Plympton
Basil Dickey
Mildred Barish
Story by Wyllis Cooper
Starring Béla Lugosi
Dorothy Arnold
Robert Kent
Cinematography Jerry Ash
William Sickner
Edited by Irving Birnbaum
Joseph Gluck
Alvin Todd
Production Universal Pictures
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date January 7, 1939
Running time 265 minutes
(12 chapters)
78 minutes
(edited feature film)
Country United States
Language English