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My Zinc Bed (2008)
A recovering alcoholic becomes involved with his boss’s wife, a former cocaine addict.
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Second Serve (1986)
Fact-based story about tennis pro Renee Richards, whose player status was challenged in 1976 when it was revealed that she was a transsexual. Flashback to 1964 and meet Richard Radley, a successful New York doctor with a great lifestyle, a flashy girl friend, and a secret life. Seems like the good doctor likes to dress up in women’s clothes and visit Manhattan. His psychiatrist mother refuses to deal with him and sends him to a colleague who diagnoses with a psychotic gender confusion, which he says can be unlearned. After a failed marriage and fatherhood, he gives in to the transsexual operation and becomes Renee for good with a new life in California.
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The Lady Vanishes (1979)
Remake of Alfred Hitchcock’s 1938 classic. On the eve of the Second World War, a train carrying an assortment of passengers, pulls out of a small town in Bavaria. When one of the passengers, a kindly old lady, mysteriously disappears the other passengers are led into confrontation with the Nazis and a desperate race for freedom.
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The Missiles of October (1974)
Based in part on Robert F. Kennedy’s book, “Thirteen Days,” this film profiles the Kennedy Administration’s actions during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
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Monte Carlo
An American writer on the Riviera courts a Russian singer who is spying on Nazis for revenge.
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Alpha Beta (1976)
E. A. Whitehead adapted the script of Alpha Beta from his own play. Albert Finney is cast as “The Man,” while Rachel Roberts plays “The Woman.” The rest of the film remains in this pretentious vein, as we watch Finney and Roberts’ marriage crumble before our eyes. One suspects that they might have patched things up had they ignored Whitehead’s florid prose. Alpha Beta is salvaged dramatically by the dynamic performances of its stars, who far outshine the material.
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Absolution (1978)
At a Catholic public school, Benjamin Stanfield is tired of being the teacher’s pet and decides to play a practical joke on his form master Father Goddard. In confession, Stanfield tells Goddard that he has accidentally murdered his friend Blakey and buried him in the forest. When Goddard investigates the matter, he finds a buried scarecrow. Goddard is outraged, but, due to the seal of confession, he knows he cannot expel Stanfield. Shortly after, Stanfield once again enters the confession booth, telling Goddard that what before was a practical joke, he has now made happen. In disbelief, Goddard once again goes to the forest to investigate the matter. This time, he discovers Blakey’s dead body. The plot soon thickens as Stanfield’s fellow student Arthur Dyson mysteriously disappears…
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