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Turid Aarsted Movies

1974  
 
In this experimental film, everyone enacts roles written from the player's lives; everyone plays themselves, literally. The narrative backbone of the story is writer Mel Howard's unsuccessful career as a filmmaker. The producer, Kenneth E. Schwartz, narrates. When Howard's life and his movie go out of control at the same time, the narrator expresses his bemusement at the whole enterprise: "This picture was not supposed to be a diary of freaky people." The ongoing real lives of the players increasingly intermingle with the quasi-fictitious storyline designed by the writers. This film is more structured than Warhol's avant garde efforts, and its characters are more sympathetic than in Fassbinder's experimental pictures. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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1973  
R  
When government attorney Mike Mandell (Stacy Keach, Jr.) begins to suffer from a mental disorder that periodically transforms him into another mobster personality known as "Sonny," his strange behavior doesn't escape the notice of narcotics agent Gordon Pankey (Harris Yulin). As Gordon observes Mike, the man becomes more and more paranoid that he is being watched. The score for this film was created by the jazz group Weather Report. ~ Iotis Erlewine, Rovi

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