Come Play With Me Film
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Come Play With Me Film
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Young Alvise's body is paralyzed, or at least he thinks so. He is infatuated by his beautiful aunt Lea. What starts as innocent therapy and care soon develops into strange erotic and psychol... Read all Young Alvise's body is paralyzed, or at least he thinks so. He is infatuated by his beautiful aunt Lea. What starts as innocent therapy and care soon develops into strange erotic and psychological battle between them. Young Alvise's body is paralyzed, or at least he thinks so. He is infatuated by his beautiful aunt Lea. What starts as innocent therapy and care soon develops into strange erotic and psychological battle between them.
Salvatore Samperi (story) (screenplay) Sergio Bazzini (screenplay) Pier Luigi Murgia (collaboration)
Featured in The Glance of Music (2021)
Guerra e pace, Pollo e brace Written by Audrey Nohra (as Audrey Stainton Nohra) and Ennio Morricone Chorus of treble voices by Renata Cortiglioni
An early helping of incest all'Italia from Salvatore Samperi
I saw this film in Italian without the benefit of English dubbing or English subtitles (and even without Italian subtitles). Nevertheless, having seen six other Salvatore Samperi films it wasn't too hard to follow it as it develops many of the same themes as his other works--incestuous longings, sexual perversity, dark tragi-comedy, along with an almost overwhelming cinematic stylization and musical score. Lou Castel plays a teenager who is seemingly physically handicapped, but is perhaps only mentally ill. After enduring a series of shock treatments in the prologue and (seemingly) confined to a wheelchair, he comes to stay with his aunt and uncle (Lisa Gastoni and Gabriele Ferzetti), and an incestuous attraction soon grows between him and the aunt, much to the consternation of the uncle. Castel was a very promising actor in the late 60's whose career was unfortunately derailed by his leftist political leanings. He does a good job here, managing to appear both genuinely mentally disturbed AND charismatically attractive. Ferzetti seemed to get stereotyped in these "twisted Italian family" type films. (In his most memorable film I've seen, he plays a lonely father who gets seduced by his daughter's best friend AND then his own daughter). Gastoni started out in typical voluptuous 60's eye candy roles, but starting with this film, turned into a very daring actress in middle-age (when I'm sure she still never got kicked out of anyone's bed for eating crackers). She and Samperi would team up again for the equally dark and disturbing film "Scandalo". Samperi meanwhile is perhaps THE most under-appreciated Italian director. I've yet to see one of his films that was legitimately released with English subtitles (as opposed to completely in Italian, horribly dubbed into English, and/or a substandard bootleg). Still, his work is quite interesting. He does have a strange fascination with quasi-incest, but that seemed to be a general thing in Italian films of that era (besides, the Italian actors of that era sure made incest look very appealing . . .). And Samperi adds a twisted ending to this particular "comedy" that I won't give away here, but was probably even more controversial than the incest in Catholic Italy in the late 60's. This is worth seeing, even in Italian.
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By what name was Come Play with Me (1968) officially released in Canada in English?
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This article needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Come Play with Me" 1977 film – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( November 2009 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )
^ Jump up to: a b Sheridan, Simon (2011). Keeping the British End Up: Four Decades of Saucy Cinema (4 ed.). Titan Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0857682796 .
^ Jump up to: a b Sweet, Matthew (24 November 2000). "No sex please; we're bored" . The Guardian . Retrieved 8 September 2017 .
^ Jump up to: a b Prynn, Jonathan (8 September 2017). "Former 'sex comedy' cinema given new life as steakhouse" . London Evening Standard . Retrieved 8 September 2017 .
^ Jump up to: a b Blackburn, Virginia (8 April 2016). "A blue plaque for a blue lady: Risqué film star Mary Millington honoured" . Express . Retrieved 25 July 2016 .
^ Sheridan, Simon (1999). Come Play with Me: The Life and Films of Mary Millington . FAB Press. ISBN 0-9529260-7-5 .
^ Simon Sheridan (2015). "The Fact of Fiction: 'Come Play with Me' in Print" . Mary Millington . Retrieved 22 February 2018 .
^ Babington, Bruce (2001). British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery . Manchester University Press. p. 205. ISBN 9780719058417 .
^ Suzy Mandel and Mary Millington pictured April 1978
^ Oo-Err Missus , Channel 4 Television, broadcast 2005
^ McGillivray, David (2017). Doing rude things: the history of the British sex film, 1957-1981 (2nd ed.). Wolfbait. ISBN 978-1999744151 .
^ "Come Play with Me (1977)" . Pre-cert Video . Retrieved 13 July 2017 .
^ "Screenbound Pictures: Come Play With Me and The Playbirds Restoration Comparison" . Blu-ray.com . 1 April 2020 . Retrieved 13 October 2020 .
Come Play with Me is a 1977 British softcore pornographic film, starring Mary Millington and directed by George Harrison Marks . Its cast list contains many well-known British character actors who were not known for appearing in such films. The film is regarded by many as the most successful of the British sex comedies of the seventies. [1] It ran continuously at the Moulin Cinema in Great Windmill Street , Soho , London for 201 weeks, from April 1977 to March 1981, [2] [3] which is listed in the Guinness Book Of World Records as the longest-running screening in Britain. A blue plaque on the former cinema's site commemorates this. [4]
Cornelius Clapworthy ( Harrison Marks ) and his sidekick Maurice Kelly ( Alfie Bass ) are two elderly forgers responsible for flooding the UK with fake banknotes . On the run from their gangster boss Slasher ( Ronald Fraser ) and effeminate, cross-dressing government official Podsnap ( Ken Parry ), the pair escape to the Scottish Highlands and, posing as musicians, hide out at Bovington Manor, a hotel owned by Lady Bovington ( Irene Handl ), who is attempting and failing to run it as a health farm .
The Manor has very few guests, and Clapworthy and Kelly find themselves free to continue their criminal activities, albeit having to constantly recite " O for the Wings of a Dove " on a portable organ to drown out the noise of the printing press that produces the fake banknotes. However, when Lady Bovington’s choreographer nephew Rodney and his troupe of dancing girls arrive at the Manor, business picks up considerably when the girls, vaguely under the leadership of Rena ( Suzy Mandel ), decide to help Lady Bovington out by dressing as nurses and re-opening the Manor as a brothel , albeit using the health farm facilities, with topless massages and "the full treatment" being the order of the day. This means trouble and unwanted attention for Clapworthy and Kelly, especially when the girls’ services attract Slasher and his heavies to the Manor.
Harrison Marks had written Come Play With Me ' s script in 1970, not long after making The Nine Ages of Nakedness , but it was to remain on the shelf while in the ensuing years he was declared bankrupt, was the subject of an obscenity trial, and drank heavily. He made ends meet during this period by shooting short softcore sex films for the British 8 mm market, as well as hardcore, blue movie shorts for overseas.
In the mid-1970s Marks had begun selling explicit photo shoots to porn publisher David Sullivan ’s top-shelf magazines, such as Latent Lesbian Fantasy featuring Cosey Fanni Tutti , which appeared in the first issue of Sullivan's Ladybirds magazine in August 1976. Marks had, evidently, also sold Sullivan the rights to some of his 8 mm sex films; press adverts by Kelerfern (a Sullivan mail order company) carried Marks-directed sex shorts like Hole in One , Nymphomania , King Muff and Doctor Sex for sale around this period. In the 2005 documentary Oo-Err Missus , Sullivan remarks: "George was a great entertainer, he was a bit of a drunk really, but he was good fun … he said to me: 'I’ve got this old script I’ve had for years', I said: 'give us a look George' and within three weeks we were shooting it".
Much of the glamour in the film was provided by nude models popular in Sullivan's top-shelf magazines at the time (Millington, Pat Astley, Penny Chisholm, Nicola Austin), as well as more mainstream comedy actresses like Ingmar Bergman ’s daughter Anna Bergman , Sue Longhurst and Suzy Mandel from The Benny Hill Show . Lower down the cast list, actresses like Lisa Taylor, Sonia Svenburger and Suzette Sangalo Bond all had blue-movie backgrounds.
Come Play With Me was filmed during the autumn of 1976. Bovington Manor was in reality the Weston Manor Hotel, near Oxford . Owing to work commitments, Suzy Mandel was absent from the scene that introduces the girls travelling to Bovington Manor onboard a coach (she was taping a Benny Hill episode at the time).
After seeing a rough cut of the film, Sullivan and representatives of the distributor Tigon thought the film needed more nudity as well as more Mary Millington, so several additional scenes—including Mary's big scene with Marks' regular Howard "Vanderhorn" Nelson —were filmed. The "add-on" nature of these scenes to the narrative is sometimes apparent.
Several hardcore porn scenes were also shot for Come Play With Me . These would have appeared towards the end of the film; however, in the event all traces of hardcore sex were cut from these scenes in the pre-release stage, and the explicit footage went missing soon afterward. "For real" were the lesbian scene between Mary Millington and Penny Chisholm, as well as the heterosexual sex scenes between Lisa Taylor and Derek Aylward, Suzette Sangalo Bond and an unknown male, and Sonia Svenberger and Gordon Hickman. These scenes remain in the film, albeit heavily cut down to softcore, with only Penny Chisholm's "flushed" face during her sex scene with Mary giving a hint of these scenes' explicit origins.
Sullivan saw Come Play With Me as a chance to turn his then-girlfriend and magazine cover girl Mary Millington into a film star, as well as an opportunity for some cross-media marketing. Sullivan's magazines like Playbirds and Whitehouse are seen throughout the film, but it was while promoting the film through his magazines that Sullivan really came into his own. Months before the film's release, Sullivan’s readers were promised Come Play with Me would be "the British Deep Throat " and would "make Linda Lovelace look like Noddy ". [5] To add credibility to these claims, photo shoots only slightly short of being hardcore were published in Sullivan’s magazines and claimed to be stills from the upcoming film, whereas in fact they bore little resemblance to anything in Come Play With Me . Frequently shown in these photo shoots was hardcore actor Timothy Blackstone, sometimes billed in the articles as "Randy Buck, Esquire". In spite of this exposure, Blackstone does not appear in the actual film.
The hype for Come Play with Me also spread to the letters pages of Sullivan’s magazines. A fan letter of dubious authenticity (as it refers to scenes that do not appear in the film) from "Bert U" to Mary Millington in issue 27 of Whitehouse claims: "Dear Mary, I must congratulate you on your film Come Play with Me , I found it screamingly funny and very sexy as well…I loved every randy moment… everyone was so natural, and Henry McGhee [sic] as the PM was superb." The letter goes on to falsely claim that the actor Roy Kinnear appears in the film, and that "(Roy) looked like a Roman Emperor in the swimming pool scene. I‘ll bet it took him all his time to keep his towel on during rehearsals for the film… it looked to me, Mary, as though you were fucked rigid during the film".
In March 1977 Sullivan published the Playbirds Erotic Film Guide , a magazine entirely concerned with the release of Come Play with Me . The film was also adapted into a paperback novel, and in the summer of 1977 a sequel paperback novel, Come Play with Me Again , was released. [6]
The film ran continuously at the Moulin Cinema in London's West End from April 1977 to March 1981, and is regarded by many as the most successful of the British sex comedies of the seventies. [1] Costing £120,000 to make, the film took £550,000 during its West End run, and broke box-office records in the cinemas of a number of provincial cities. By 2001, the film had taken over £4 million. [7] In a publicity stunt for the first anniversary of the film’s opening, Suzy Mandel and Mary Millington posed in lingerie on the Moulin Cinema's marquee. [8] Sullivan's follow-up film The Playbirds (1978) gave Millington a more sizable role.
While Millington’s popularity and Sullivan’s relentless publicity campaign are without doubt what made the film a success, Come Play with Me remains a peculiarly Harrison Marks concoction, with Marks’ background as a photographer of nudes, his love of old-style British music hall comedy, and his heavy drinking adding much to the film's overall character. As comic counterfeiters Cornelius Clapworthy and his sidekick Maurice Kelly, Marks and Alfie Bass resemble a baggy-pants comedy double-act from the music hall days; the pair even sleep together in the same bed, à la Morecambe and Wise . Marks also throws in a song-and-dance routine, "It's Great to be Here", performed by himself, Bass, and a group of sexy nurses. "George was in a bit of a time warp, he forgot at times that it was a sex film he was making", commented Sullivan, "he thought he was making some vaudeville comedy… I thought it was a weird old film". [9]
A blue plaque on the site of the former Moulin Cinema in Great Windmill Street , Soho , commemorates its 201-week run there, which is listed in the Guinness Book Of World Records as the longest-running screening in British cinema history. [2] [3] [4] However, the validity of this record and the blue plaque is called into question in the second edition of David McGillivray’s book Doing Rude Things which states that "film historian Allen Eyles has proven conclusively that Come Play With Me ran for 165 not 201 weeks. It is not Britain’s longest running film – that is South Pacific , which ran... a total of four years and twenty-two weeks. Questions should be asked in parliament about the deception I may have instigated." [10]
The success of Come Play With Me inevitably led to imitation productions sometimes similar in name only, and some more authorized than others.
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