Directing
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A grizzled San Francisco reporter recounts his epic manuscript: the tale of two crime families vying for control of the Bay Area.
Teenage runaway Angel grows up too fast in the hands of a horny couple.
San Francisco Airport. Anne Stewart is paged. Three young girls show up at the counter, but the page is for a fourth Anne, an old lady. The girls have arrived for two weeks in the city by the bay, and over lunch, they remark about the odd coincidence and agree to meet again later to exchange vacation stories.
A straight-laced married couple become involved in wife swapping after gettting involved with a hippie flower child.
An obvious comment on loneliness and the human condition, with a high degree of technical expertise.
Shot in Sausalito in 1969 and released in 1970, it is subtitled ‘The Story of Bonnie and Hyde’, and is the story of a nymphomaniac who meets an exhibitionist. It’s a creative and humorous madcap romp, and features entertaining artwork by Roger Brand. It also features a sexual encounter between the film’s star Grinda Pupic and a coke bottle.
This film “strikes a blow for women’s liberation” because it attempts to solve the problems of an attractive, disciplined girl whose marriage to the handsome, athletic, hard-working youth of her dreams turns sour because of his romantic clumsiness and insecurity. Through the friendship of another couple, Jane and her husband learn to be equals in sexual freedom.
Ostensibly about first-time sexual experiences. Essentially, it is a series of vignettes loosely tied together by a book everyone is reading.