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Camilla More Movies

1996  
R  
Former pro wrestler Roddy Piper plays the captain of a Southern California charter boat who gets mixed up with South American drug smugglers. He is seduced by the wife (Tawny Kitaen) of a powerful drug dealer (Juan Fernandez) into taking a load of drugs between California and Mexico. This brings him to the attention of the DEA and a U.S. Customs officer who holds a personal grudge against him. ~ Brian Gusse, Rovi

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Starring:
Roddy PiperTawny Kitaen, (more)
 
1990  
R  
The crew of a spaceship awakens a terrifying extraterrestrial force when they journey to the dark side of the moon in this sci-fi horror film. They soon discover that the alien beast feeds on human souls and frantically attempt to find a way to defeat the creature and escape. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

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1990  
R  
In this exciting horror outing from Egypt, an archaeologist unwittingly becomes a time traveler after he unearths an old statue of Alexander the Great. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi

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1989  
R  
This R-rated chiller has nothing whatever to do with the old Leonard Nimoy series In Search Of. In fact, it was originally shipped out as merely Serpent of Death. The story involves an archeologist and an ancient statue. Archeologist unearths statue; statue has curse; archeologist is reeeeeeal sorry! Alternately horrifying and exhilirating, Serpent of Death stars Jeff Fahey (him we've heard of) and Camila More (her we haven't). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1988  
PG13  
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The 1988 TV movie Maybe Baby stars Jane Curtin as Julia, a 39-year-old career woman, married to upwardly mobile 57-year-old Hal (Dabney Coleman). Julia and Hal had originally agreed not to have children, but after heeding the tick-tock of her biological clock, Julia has changed her mind. At first resistant to the concept of parenthood, Hal goes along with his wife's new agenda, confident that at her age the chances of pregnancy are slim. But Julia does get pregnant--and suddenly begins to harbor second thoughts. Maybe Baby ends with Julia settling upon her third thoughts, and deciding to shoulder the burdens of late motherhood. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Jane CurtinDabney Coleman, (more)
 
1985  
 
Now that Diane (Shelley Long) has gone to Europe with Frasier (Kelsey Grammer), Sam (Ted Danson) must hire a new waitress. Carla (Rhea Perlman) hopes to steer Sam clear of future romantic entanglements by insisting that he hire a much-older woman named Lillian (Lila Kaye). Carla's scheme backfires when Lillian turns out to have a gorgeous daughter (Camilla More). The late Nicholas Colasanto (Coach) appears briefly via outtakes from earlier episodes. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1984  
R  
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Hockey-masked killer Jason Vorhees returns to terrorize a lakeside family and their rowdy teen neighbors in this fourth installment of the long-running slasher series. After the events of Friday the 13th, Part 3, Jason's seemingly lifeless body is brought to the morgue, where horny attendant Axel (Bruce Mahler) is trying to score with foxy Nurse Morgan (Lisa Freeman). The pair quickly meet a grisly end. Meanwhile, at Crystal Lake, estranged wife Mrs. Jarvis (Joan Freeman) and her kids -- young Tommy (Corey Feldman) and teenaged Trish (Kimberly Beck) -- find their quiet invaded by a group of hard-partying kids moving into the rental house next door. The youngsters include curious virgin Sara (Barbara Howard), hot-to-trot Samantha (Judie Aronson), and nebbish Jimmy (Crispin Glover). Tommy, a monster makeup enthusiast, enjoys watching the scantily clad young ladies through his window, while Trish toys with the idea of joining in their revelries. Also lurking around the area is Rob (Erich Anderson), who claims to be hunting bear but actually has mysterious ties to the events of Friday the 13th, Part 2. As the house full of teens begins to pair off -- aided by the addition of local twins Tina (Camilla More) and Terri (Carey More) to the mix -- an unseen killer begins to pick them off one by one. The bloodshed climaxes with a tense showdown in which Tommy disguises himself as a bald, lumpy boyhood version of Jason in hopes of distracting the relentless psychopath who hunts him. Feldman would return for a cameo in Friday the 13th, Part V: A New Beginning, only to be replaced by another actor in a grown-up version of the role. ~ Brian J. Dillard, Rovi

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Starring:
Crispin GloverKimberly Beck, (more)
 
1984  
 
When a man decides to play the role of twins in order to romance another set of twins, life becomes much more complicated than he wants or needs in this interesting farce by Yves Robert, adapted from the much blacker comedy by Donald Westlake, Two Much. Matthias Duval (Pierre Richard) is a humble greeting-card vendor when he meets twin American heiresses and decides to seduce each of them since he cannot tell them apart anyway and is attracted to both sisters. His originally innocent ploy eventually makes a bigamist out of him and nearly does him in since he has to bed-hop between the two women, without remembering who is whom. The sisters' dirty-dealing lawyer finds Matthias out one day, and in the subsequent fight Matthias accidentally kills the man. Will this affect Matthias's relationship with both sisters? Will he be caught and go to jail? -- the answers are unexpected. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Pierre RichardCarey More, (more)
 
1983  
 
Randy Stern (Mary-Margaret Humes) hires the A-Team to help her uncle Mickey (Norman Alden), the owner of a small construction firm. A group of mobsters is determined to sabotage Mickey to prevent his excavation of some rather incriminating evidence--namely, the murdered body of his former partner. Inasmuch as this episode begins at the Universal studios where A-Team leader Hannibal is doing stunt work for a horror picture (dressed as the Creature from the Black Lagoon), expect a number of cute movie in-jokes, ranging from the name of the head villain (Carl Denham!) to a chance meeting between series regular Dirk Benedict and one of his former "co-stars" from Battlestar Gallactica. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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1982  
 
Wim Wenders' The State of Things (Der Stand der Dinge) was financed by one of the director's chief mentors, Francis Ford Coppola. This highly autobiographical work concerns a shoestring movie producer and his ragtag crew. Stranded in the outer reaches of Portugal, the director doesn't even have any film in his camera. There's nothing left to do but scare up a potential backer--preferably one of those rich, movie-mad Americans. In illustrating the plight of the fictional filmmakers, Wenders strikes a blow on behalf of the homeless and disenfranchised everywhere; it is also an a clef recreation of the difficulties faced by the director during production of his first American film Hammett (also made under the auspices of Coppola). ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Patrick BauchauIsabelle Weingarten, (more)