The subject turned the other day to movies that were barely seen when initially released, and will almost certainly never be seen by anyone on DVD and therefore never remembered by anyone, ever. Dead, buried, finito. And I came up with one -- Saul Swimmer's The Black Pearl (1978), which you can't find on VHS and never was issued on DVD.

It starred Gilbert Roland, Carl Anderson and Mario Custodio , and was basically about a hunt for a large black pearl located off the Baja California coast. The money scene was about the young hero having to grapple with a giant manta ray that guards the treasure.
The reason I remember The Black Pearl is not because I liked it all that much. It's because I was close with a lady who lived on West 13th Street named Elaine who told me something about a certain producer of The Black Pearl -- he was young so maybe he was just an associate producer -- that has always stayed in my mind. And only now, nearly 30 years after the fact, can the story finally be told.
Elaine and I were boyfriend-girlfriend for as little less than a year, sometime between mid '78 and early to mid '79. We remained semi-friendly after we broke up, and she told me one night that she was going out with a guy named something Harris, who'd produced or co-produced The Black Pearl. I'd seen her having a drink with him at the Village Bistro -- nice looking, dark hair, nice sweater -- and asked her a day or two later if he was a nice guy and she said yes, etc.
And then somehow I managed to get her to tell me how their first night of amour had gone, and she told me that they'd hardly slept at all due to his having made love to her eight times from midnight to the crack of dawn. Wow, I said, and let it go at that. And yet deep down I was impressed. A night of typical grand passion might include three or four go-rounds, but eight? Harris was either very athletic or very full of feeling, or a combination of the two.
The take-away thing is that Elaine got a little bit angry with me the next time we spoke because -- I was actually being respectful in a roundabout way -- I referred to the Black Pearl producer as "Eight Times Harris." She was actually more like half-pissed and half-laughing. But that "Eight Times Harris" remark is the reason I still remember The Black Pearl.
And now there are a few more in the world who will forever remember this film. Right? If I hadn't written this The Black Pearl would be the same dead movie it's been for the last 28 or 29 years, but now there's something to remember it by. Am I right or wrong?
Posted by Jeffrey Wells on August 13, 2008 at 12:32 PM
comment #1
Mgmax says ...
Yes, you have given it web immortality.
One time I did a search for my great-grandfather. On the web I mean. This was not completely silly because he was a college president and a musician of some modest note. I found an article online based on a letter someone had found dating back to his early teaching days... containing an account of a skit in which he and other teachers were parodied by their students. In 1912. At a cornfield college in Kansas.
If that has web immortality, a low budget 70s Gilbert Roland movie certainly should.
http://www.bethelks.edu/mennonitelife/2006Mar/thiesen.php
Posted by Mgmax at August 13, 2008 1:27 PM
comment #2
staggerlee333 says ...
Dusty and Sweets McGee
Posted by staggerlee333 at August 13, 2008 1:29 PM
comment #3
Michael says ...
Eight times? The only conclusion to be reached is...they weren't doing it right.
Posted by Michael at August 13, 2008 1:29 PM
comment #4
JHRussell says ...
"The subject turned the other day to movies that were barely seen when initially released, and will almost certainly never be seen by anyone on DVD and therefore never remembered by anyone."
I got one that meets your criteria: THERE WILL BE BLOOD
Posted by JHRussell at August 13, 2008 1:30 PM
comment #5
Rich S. says ...
You know it's an obscure flick when IMDB doesn't even have enough info on it to identify Eight Times Harris.
My own nomination would be for Ator: The Fighting Eagle, starring the immortal Miles O'Keefe. It will forever live on in my memories for the "Cave of the Blind Warriors" scene.
Posted by Rich S. at August 13, 2008 1:45 PM
comment #6
BurmaShave says ...
THERE WILL BE BLOOD
Gross
$40,218,903 (USA) source: IMDb.
Posted by BurmaShave at August 13, 2008 1:47 PM
comment #7
George Prager says ...
CHILDREN OF MEN in 30 years.
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 1:53 PM
comment #8
lionsfan says ...
Robert Clouse's "Darker Than Amber," a pretty good adaptation of one of John D. MacDonald;s Travis McGee books, with Rod Taylor as McGee (later played by Sam Elliott on TV). And James Frawley's "The Christian Licorice Store," another Gilbert Roland classic, where he plays a character based on Panchoi Gonzalez to one based on Jimmy Connors played by Beau Bridges. There's two for ya!
But really, Jeffrey, gentlemen aren't supposed to tell. Not even about other paramours old girlfriends may have had.
Posted by lionsfan at August 13, 2008 1:55 PM
comment #9
MilkMan says ...
Ivanstxc.
Directed by Bernard Rose.
Starring Danny Huston and Peter Weller.
Released in 2000. Disappeared from the theatres almost immediately.
Unavailable in the U.S. on either DVD or VHS.
This movie was buried.
Something to do with CAA, Jay Moloney, right?
The story of a terminally ill super-agent (Huston) who keeps his condition secret so he might still do his job, complete a deal for a mega action star (Weller).
Based on Tolstoy.
I don't know anyone who has ever seen it.
The reviews, not that there are many, strike me as dismissive.
I bought a used DVD of Ivansxtc from Amazon UK a couple of months ago.
I still have not watched it.
I don't know why.
I did watch the trailer for the movie, and what struck me instantly was the type of DV Camera they shot it on.
The image looks like the year 2000.
I don't know how to describe it, or what exactly I'm trying to say.
Maybe what I'm trying to say is this: the 20th Century, The Cinematic Century, was captured on film, therefore when we think of historical events from that century, in our mind we see it in celluloid.
I think the 21rst century is going to be different, no?
The Video Century.
Maybe I should just watch the movie.
Posted by MilkMan at August 13, 2008 1:56 PM
comment #10
gruver1 says ...
Wells to lionsan: I waited 28 or 29 years. That's long enough.
Posted by gruver1 at August 13, 2008 1:58 PM
comment #11
Mgmax says ...
Mr. Sycamore, with Jason Robards as a mailman who turns into a tree, directed by the uncle of the Weitzes.
Saw it in Maltin, but have never run across a screening anywhere.
Posted by Mgmax at August 13, 2008 2:01 PM
comment #12
George Prager says ...
How about MIRRORS with Kitty Winn?
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0076365/
Or RUBY with Piper Laurie?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=De7es8HMevw
Or a movie I was thinking about just this morning:
SOME KIND OF HERO
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083107/
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 2:02 PM
comment #13
PastePotPete says ...
Ha, I remember reading the novel that movie is based on sometime in my middle school years. I'm not sure if it was assigned or just on a summer reading list or something.
I remember enjoying the basic story. Probably unfilmable with sfx of the 1970s.
Posted by PastePotPete at August 13, 2008 2:03 PM
comment #14
George Prager says ...
I thought MIlkMan was pulling another Butcher:
MilkMan [TypeKey Profile Page] says ...
There was a movie released in 1976 called "Butcher," (dir. Ted Griffin) starring Yaphet Kotto as a South Central L.A. butcher (he works in the meat department of a Safeway Market) whose 13 year old daughter is kidnapped, raped and beheaded by two L.A.P.D. cops (in graphic detail I might add, even by today's standards. If the rape scene in Irreversible made you upset, then please fast-forward past this part of the movie, as the rape of the little girl lasts at least ten minutes, and the beheading, while mostly implied, is almost too excruciating due to the masterful sound design by Peter Berkos) played by a pre-Hulk Bill Bixby and Darby Hinton, of Malibu Express-fame. The cops are let off, of course, which sends Kotto into a jet-fueled paroxysm. The rest of the movie follows Kotto around as he shoots cops dead, then uses his butcher skills on their corpses, feeding their remains to a feral group of Rottweilers that congregate in the trash-strewn lot behind his house. Kotto is never caught, which tips the movie toward the fantastic, but the whole movie has a very surreal quality to it, so the fact that we are never shown an investigation into who is butchering L.A.'s finest makes a weird sort of sense. Griffin went to school at UCLA in the late sixties, and was a documentary filmmaker before he made this, his first and last, foray into feature films. The movie opens with a behind the scenes look of what goes in at your local supermarket, complete with a homage to Stan Brahkage, in which Griffin's camera is fixed, in close up, on a lamb shoulder being deboned. But it's the movie's final image that is indelible, as Yaphet Kotto, fresh off of the murder of two CHP's, throws fresh scraps to the pack of the dogs who have now become his only companions, sits down with them, and pets them as one by one they nuzzle and lick his face.
Posted by MilkMan [TypeKey Profile Page] at September 14, 2007 10:06 A
But he wasn't!
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 2:09 PM
comment #15
MikeSchaeferSF says ...
MilkMan: I actually saw Ivansxtc in a theater during its very brief release. I went because Roger Ebert had an orgasm over it (it may even have been in his 10 best that year, if memory serves). I remember thinking "it's OK but it's not THAT good". And as one of the early shot-on-digital-video features, it was rather a chore to watch.
Posted by MikeSchaeferSF at August 13, 2008 2:11 PM
comment #16
BurmaShave says ...
I missed Butcher, but that is undoubtedly the highest moment in the history of MilkMan. Also, wasn't Wells in IVANSXTC? I seem to recall him being in a party scene.
And as for CHILDREN OF MEN, since in 30 years I imagine that's what the world is actually going to look like, I think it will still be valued.
Posted by BurmaShave at August 13, 2008 2:14 PM
comment #17
George Prager says ...
LOST ANGELS
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dP4EcwJr3aY
FIRST BORN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zHTqHZAX9Cw
OF UNKNOWN ORGIN
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHeo8xLDNQY
LUNA
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dw51QdLsHMM
THE SWEET RIDE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZO_jM074EA
hey lionsfan!:
THE CHRISTIAN LICORICE STORE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cUXnaNb50Y
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 2:22 PM
comment #18
Pinko Punko says ...
Butcher was MilkMan's Citizen Kane, an early career masterpiece, but he's had others of greater complexity and dexterity. A truly essential artist.
Posted by Pinko Punko at August 13, 2008 2:24 PM
comment #19
thevisceral says ...
The Godfather Part IV. It exists only in my mind. You guys should see this thing. It's so awesome!!!
Posted by thevisceral at August 13, 2008 2:30 PM
comment #20
Doug Pratt says ...
John Korty's Riverrun
Posted by Doug Pratt at August 13, 2008 2:32 PM
comment #21
R. Hunt says ...
"Some Kind of Hero" just came out on DVD.
My own list of obscure and forgotten films includes
"Another Fine Mess", which was for years not even listed in IMDB or in Maltin's guides. Produced by Tom Smothers, directed by "Super Dave" Osborne (back when he was better known as "Officer Judy"), it featured Rich Little as Richard Nixon. The gimmick was that Nixon and Agnew spoke and behaved like Laurel and Hardy..
"Deafula" - a vampire movie performed in sign language. (I've never seen this - just ran across a reference in an old "Screen World")
"The Phynx" , a legendarily awful comedy about a rock group, with cameos by dozens of aging stars. Supposedly played in LA for one day only, and was never seen again..
Posted by R. Hunt at August 13, 2008 2:32 PM
comment #22
renorambler says ...
I totally REremember seeing this film. In fact, I know I've tried to remember it in the past but couldn't quite conjure up where some of the images in my head were coming from until I saw the poster.
Now, of course, I have a completely different image in my head thanks to JW.
Posted by renorambler at August 13, 2008 2:38 PM
comment #23
berkguru says ...
Jericho Mile
released on VHS but NEEDS to get a DVD release
Posted by berkguru at August 13, 2008 2:41 PM
comment #24
jimjonesiii says ...
I own Ivanxstc. I catched it the first time on Cinemax.
Great film.
Posted by jimjonesiii at August 13, 2008 2:45 PM
comment #25
berkguru says ...
also whatever happened to Ken Park
that was absolutely buried
Posted by berkguru at August 13, 2008 2:48 PM
comment #26
Mgmax says ...
George!, the forgotten children's classic whose behind Benjy is not worthy to sniff:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0066660/
The Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones-- unneeded "Confessions of a Window Cleaner" type British comedy "sequel," the only film I ever remember being pulled from my local theater in Wichita in less than a full week run. Evidently they literally sold no tickets at all. Zero, for three days straight.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074189/
Posted by Mgmax at August 13, 2008 2:51 PM
comment #27
George Prager says ...
And one of my personal favorites:
DOGS IN SPACE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UYSUYR8gqiU
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 2:52 PM
comment #28
Daviddb says ...
"Of Unknown Origin" better known as "The Rat Warrior" named so because Peter Weller in the 3rd Act dresses up like one of the extras in George Miller's post-apocalyptic masterpiece...
Believe it or not, Sly Stallone saw this film and was so impressed, he hired the director George P. Cosmatos to do the second Rambo film believing (if memory serves me) that if he could do this good a job with a movie about a rat that lives in a wall, he could do even better with more money on a Rambo movie.
Posted by Daviddb at August 13, 2008 2:56 PM
comment #29
MilkMan says ...
Berkguru:
Saw Ken Park a couple of years ago. Had to watch it on my laptop. Was Region 3 or something. Out of all the Larry Clark movies, I have to say I liked it best, even better than kids, and I think that has to do with Ed Lachman co-directing. Yeah, there's the requisite scenes of auto-erotic asphyxiation (complete with pop shot); 16 yr old eating out quite possibly the hottest MILF (Maeve Quinlan) ever; threesomes (including Clark's girlfriend), but for some reason, and I can't quite put my finger on it, it all seems kind of...sweet.
The one sheet for Ken Park is one of the best ever.
Posted by MilkMan at August 13, 2008 2:59 PM
comment #30
Abbey Normal says ...
How about "Nightwing"? Middle-of-the-road type creature feature of sorts, with bats and Native American drug rituals....reasonably good way to spend 90 minutes or so.
Posted by Abbey Normal at August 13, 2008 3:22 PM
comment #31
Abbey Normal says ...
How about "Nightwing"? Middle-of-the-road type creature feature of sorts, with bats and Native American drug rituals....reasonably good way to spend 90 minutes or so.
Posted by Abbey Normal at August 13, 2008 3:23 PM
comment #32
bmcintire says ...
I recall RUBY and THE HEARSE running at about the same time on HBO back in the 80's - and I have perpetually confused the two since then. I wanted to love Hiller's NIGHTWING, but was ultimately bored by it (much the same result for Frankenheimer's PROPHECY).
And I'm sure it hasn't aged well at all (not that it was well-received back in 1980) but I'd certainly like to see THE AWAKENING on DVD at some point.
Posted by bmcintire at August 13, 2008 3:39 PM
comment #33
anti-sardine says ...
How about Split Image?
It was out on VHS briefly, but no DVD release.
I would think a film about a religious cult starring James Woods, Karen Allen, Peter Fonda, Brian Dennehy and a young Michael O'Keefe would warrant enough interest to validate a DVD pressing. Most people I mention it to have never even heard of it, but do express interest in seeing it.
I watched it once on HBO with my old girlfriend who wanted to stay up all night and party before she and her family moved to a different state. We shared old stories, drank some butterscotch schnapps and explored the large handmade comforter that my aunt had made for my family that Christmas. The next morning she was gone and I had a new nickname: "Baker's Dozen".
Sorry MilkMan
Posted by anti-sardine at August 13, 2008 3:42 PM
comment #34
berkguru says ...
MilkMan -
Was it as interesting as Goodbye Uncle Tom?
Now that is one recent DVD release that surprised me.
Posted by berkguru at August 13, 2008 3:46 PM
comment #35
T. S. Idiot says ...
I've seen La Luna, Sweet Ride, Christian Licorice Store, Riverrun, Jericho Mile, Bawdy Adventures of Tom Jones (with nifty nude scene by Natalie Ogle), Nightwing, and Split Image. Except for Jericho Mile, wish had all those hours back.
When we were much much younger, me and Mrs. Idiot did it six times one night, and, yes, we were doing it right . . . except that she . . . . Forget I brought it up.
Posted by T. S. Idiot at August 13, 2008 3:48 PM
comment #36
MilkMan says ...
What's Goodbye Uncle Tom, Berkguru? Never heard of it.
And I don't know why your sorry, Anti-Sardine. My nickname isn't Baker's Dozen. My nickname is Duds.
Posted by MilkMan at August 13, 2008 3:51 PM
comment #37
George Prager says ...
SPLIT IMAGE is great. Especially the ridiculous fight scene where O'Keefe uses Gymkata-like moves to thwart the would'be deprogrammers. Then James Woods talking about O'Keefe snackin' on Peter Fonda's shit and then pretending to assault Brian Dennehy....aaahh HBO in the 80s. And there's the other great religious cult movie TICKET TO HEAVEN with Nick Mancuso, featuring great supporting turns by Saul Rubinek and Guy Boyd.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9roQSKNm_Ks
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 3:54 PM
comment #38
MilkMan says ...
And is Loden's Wanda now available? Because it should be. It should be a Criterion.
I'd also like to see Losey's Figures in a Landscape, and Private Road, starring Bruce Robinson, back when he was just an actor and not totally awesome.
Posted by MilkMan at August 13, 2008 3:55 PM
comment #39
berkguru says ...
Goodbye Uncle Tom trailer (not for the faint at heart or those at work):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrV1sfJHLHg
Posted by berkguru at August 13, 2008 3:56 PM
comment #40
George Prager says ...
WANDA is available.
MASSACRE AT CENTRAL HIGH
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKvgOpf9SWM
Posted by George Prager at August 13, 2008 3:59 PM
comment #41
Mgmax says ...
Here's my question.
Who the hell saw all those movies Merchant-Ivory made between Shakespeare Wallah and The Europeans? I mean, they made nearly a dozen movies, all high-artsy stuff on low budgets, and I don't ever remember any of them playing anywhere (with one exception: The Wild Party). So where did they play? Where did they make enough money to make the next one possible? Has anyone ever seen Savages or Bombay Talkie or Hullaballoo Over George and Bonnie's Pictures?
Posted by Mgmax at August 13, 2008 3:59 PM
comment #42
berg says ...
Cattle Annie and Little Britches
The Great Scout & Cathouse Thursday
The Monitors
Deadhead Miles
Posted by berg at August 13, 2008 4:01 PM
comment #43
anti-sardine says ...
Jeff, I loved the The Black Pearl story.
What was your in-the-sack nickname?
I'm guessing "High Sperm Count"
Posted by anti-sardine at August 13, 2008 4:06 PM
comment #44
btwnproductions says ...
RUBY is also on DVD, and NIGHTWING is due (it's also scheduled for a remake, not a bad idea as the Martin Cruz Smith novel is as good as the movie is dreadful. Arthur Hiller and horror were not a match made in heaven. Much worse than that same summer's PROPHECY.)
SOME KIND OF HERO was a middling Richard Pryor success.
I had to suggest that the editors of Rotten Tomatoes create entries for Bertolucci's LUNA and the late Jules Dassin's UPTIGHT. The former airs on FMC. I saw the latter at the Brooklyn Academy of Music last month.
Living in Roanoke, VA, for a time in 1985 I saw ads for a film called DR. OTTO AND THE RIDDLE OF THE GLOOM BEAM, with a pre-ERNEST Jim Varney. These kinds of regional appeal pictures never get released theatrically anymore.
Posted by btwnproductions at August 13, 2008 4:19 PM
comment #45
T. S. Idiot says ...
"Has anyone ever seen Savages or Bombay Talkie or Hullaballoo Over George and Bonnie's Pictures?"
Saw Bombay Talkie at the U. of South Carolina while three drunk students made rude remarks about how boring it was. Saw Hullaballoo Over George and Bonnie's Pictures on Cinemax, I think. Both films disappointing but worth seeing for Ivory completists, if such beasts exist.
Posted by T. S. Idiot at August 13, 2008 4:33 PM
comment #46
btwnproductions says ...
KEN PARK resurfaces in NY every so often. What with pop shots and MILF munching t's simply too hot to handle.
Posted by btwnproductions at August 13, 2008 4:49 PM
comment #47
movieirv says ...
larry clark told me himelf that ken park is not avaialble the u.s. because of rights problems over music. his fight with thead of tartan films, which produced it,. resulted in a fist fight that was much reported.
anyone ever see uncle scam, a terrible comedy about the abscam scandal from the 1970s. cameros by joan rivers and pat cooper, shot in philly. anybody??
Posted by movieirv at August 13, 2008 5:18 PM
comment #48
movieirv says ...
larry clark told me himelf that ken park is not avaialble the u.s. because of rights problems over music. his fight with thead of tartan films, which produced it,. resulted in a fist fight that was much reported.
anyone ever see uncle scam, a terrible comedy about the abscam scandal from the 1970s. cameos by joan rivers and pat cooper, shot in philly. anybody??
Posted by movieirv at August 13, 2008 5:19 PM
comment #49
EOTW says ...
KEN PARK is more hype than anything good. It's all over the net, if you know where to look.
Posted by EOTW at August 13, 2008 6:17 PM
comment #50
D.Z. says ...
Electric Dreams. Why can MGM release that awful Garbage Pail Kids flick, but not it?
Posted by D.Z. at August 13, 2008 7:27 PM
comment #51
PerfectTommy says ...
Good call on "Electric Dreams", D.Z.
Anyone out there ever see "Arnold" with Roddy McDowall and Stella Stevens? I never saw it, but as a kid I it being plugged on Creature Features and thought it looked incredible. I've never been able to track it down.
Would love to be disappointed by it on DVD.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0069732/
Posted by PerfectTommy at August 13, 2008 8:09 PM
comment #52
The Hoyk says ...
MGM doesn't own ELECTRIC DREAMS anymore, unfortunately. For that matter, neither does WB, who inherited all the pre-'86 MGM films. Or at least, that is what WB is claiming the last time they were asked about putting it on DVD. It's a little treasure to me, both for the music and for the kooky Lenny von Dohlen performance. I suspect maybe it's reverted to Virgin Records, since they financed it. This could mean EMI owns it. Which of course means we'll never get it now.
Posted by The Hoyk at August 14, 2008 4:15 AM
comment #53
hcat says ...
Slapstick from another World
Jerry Lewis and Madeline Kahn in an adaption of Vonnegut's Slapstick. Don't think its available on DVD or VHS and should only be viewed out of Morbid Couriosity.
I had a soft spot for both Electric Dreams and Date with an Angel when they played on HBO in the eighties.
Posted by hcat at August 14, 2008 7:40 AM
comment #54
ShadowStar says ...
THE OUTSIDER Craig Wasson, 1979
THE LEGACY 1976 Karen Arthur
THE FARMER 1977 Angel Thompkins
NEST OF VIPORS Laura Antonelli
LADY LIBERTY Sophia Loren
RABBIT RUN 1969 James Caan
DIRTY O'NEIL 1974
Just like BLACK PEARL, they either opened wide, or played on HBO/Cinemax, and now had disappered off the face of the Universe!
Posted by ShadowStar at August 14, 2008 7:56 AM
comment #55
T. S. Idiot says ...
Because A FAN'S NOTES is one of my favorite books, I've always wanted to see http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0068571 no matter how bad it may be. It apparently was shown at two festivals but never released.
BEEN DOWN SO LONG IT LOOKS LIKE UP TO ME is another favorite book, but I want to see http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0066818 primarily because I visited the set and talked to Barry Primus and several others involved in making the film.
If you want truly obscure and strange, have a look at http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0871879, which I had never heard of until I checked Richard Quine's credits. Sounds fascinating.
Posted by T. S. Idiot at August 14, 2008 8:05 AM
comment #56
George Prager says ...
My mom was supposed to drive me and my friend VInny to an out of the way theater in Long Island to see ARNOLD. She crapped out at the last minute. I've nver forgiven her.
And then there is:
LADYBUG LADYBUG
Staff and students at a rural school react to a warning of an imminent nuclear attack, not knowing whether it is real or mistaken.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0057242/
I saw most of this on Cinemax about 15 years ago. A real downbeat film starring mostly children. The ending really freaked me out. Nancy Marchand is in it.
Posted by George Prager at August 14, 2008 8:56 AM
comment #57
pyramidsfan says ...
Where the River Runs Black. Great film. May have made it to VHS, but sure hasn't shown up on DVD. Damn shame, cuz I really want to see those Amazon fresh water dolphins again. Very atmospheric!!
Posted by pyramidsfan at August 14, 2008 9:31 AM
comment #58
PerfectTommy says ...
Pyramidsfan, here is that Amazon film on Amazon -
http://www.amazon.com/Where-River-Black-Charles-Durning/dp/B00000F73D/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=video&qid=1218731951&sr=8-3
Sadly, just VHS.
I feel your pain about ARNOLD, Prager. I think the main draw for me was Stella Stevens cleavage and a decaying skeleton which I think was Arnold. My parents made no effort whatsoever to get me to what was a must see. Fiends.
Posted by PerfectTommy at August 14, 2008 9:45 AM
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