Anne Stallybrass Movies

1993  
 
Add Diana: Her True Story to QueueAdd Diana: Her True Story to top of Queue
This British television docu-drama dishes up the turbulent royal marriage of Charles and Lady Di. The story is based on Andrew Morton's tell-all book and is considered the most accurate version of the situation. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Serena Scott ThomasDavid Threlfall, (more)
1981  
PG  
Add Night Crossing to QueueAdd Night Crossing to top of Queue
Two friends chart a daring path to freedom in this drama from Walt Disney Pictures. Peter Strelzyk (John Hurt) and Guenter Wetzel (Beau Bridges) are two men living in East Germany who can no longer tolerate the petty tyrannies of Communist rule. Together, they formulate a daring plan to escape to democratic West Germany in a hot air balloon, but Peter and Guenter realize that they have to build a very special lighter-than-air craft to carry both themselves and their families to safety. Night Crossing also features Jane Alexander, Doug McKeon, and Keith McKeon as members of the Strelzyk Family, and Glynnis O'Connor, Michael Liesik, and Geoffrey Liesik as the Wetzels. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
John HurtJane Alexander, (more)
1972  
 
The lavishly produced British historical series The Strauss Family chronicled the lives of rival "Waltz Kings" Johann Strauss -- both senior and junior -- in 19th century Vienna. Though initially forbidden to study music, Johann Strauss Jr. (Stuart Wilson) eventually became a celebrated composer, much to the chagrin of his more celebrated (and intensely competitive) father Johann Strauss Sr. (Eric Woolfe). Caught in the middle of the familial hostilities was Johann Sr.'s long-suffering wife, Anna (Anne Stallybrass), who, after being shut out of her husband's life, devoted her energies to promoting the career of her son, Johann Jr. Surviving the political upheaval of 1848, when Johann Sr. was forced into exile for siding with the Hapsburg regime, Johann Jr. went on to weather many a personal tragedy and professional setback, finding solace and comfort in his music. Among the stars-to-be seen in this seven-part miniseries were Derek Jacobi as Johann Jr.'s half-brother Josef and Jane Seymour as Russian belle Karolin. The music was provided by the London Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Cyril Ornadel. Premiering over Britain's ATV on November 7, 1972, The Strauss Family was later picked up by America's ABC network, where it was telecast on Saturday evenings from May 5 to June 16, 1973. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anne StallybrassBarbara Ferris, (more)
1972  
PG  
Polish actress Ingrid Pitt became a cult figure for her portrayal of the notorious Hungarian Countess Elizabeth Bathory in this Hammer horror film. Bathory finds that bathing in the blood of virgins restores her youthful beauty, and she enlists her servant (Nigel Green in a standout performance) to kidnap her own daughter, Ilona (Lesley-Anne Down). Bathory assumes Ilona's identity to seduce a young man (Sandor Eles), but without a supply of blood, she turns old in a hurry. The real Bathory had no such problems, reportedly slaughtering over 600 young girls before being sealed alive in her room. Pitt and Green are excellent, although director Peter Sasdy -- who helped adapt this story from Valentine Penrose's book The Bloody Countess -- moves the story along at a rather leisurely pace. Still, the performances and typically sumptuous "Hammer look" should make this film appealing to fans of historical horror. Maurice Denham, Patience Collier, and Nike Arrighi co-star. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ingrid PittNigel Green, (more)
1970  
 
Add David Copperfield to QueueAdd David Copperfield to top of Queue
This lackluster 1970 version of Charles Dickens' classic novel, David Copperfield (made as a film twice before) turns Dickens' picaresque tale into an extended flashback, with David Copperfield (Robin Phillips) as a young man, brooding on a deserted beach, recalling his youth. The characters are all trotted out in choppy flashbacks as David remembers his life as a young orphan, brought to London and passed around from relatives, to guardians, to boarding school. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Richard AttenboroughCyril Cusack, (more)
1970  
 
This ambitious four-part adaptation of Dostoevsky's 19th century novel The Possessed was originally telecast in Britain in 1970. A savage attack on the Russian radical movement of the 1870s, the story was set in a peaceful bourgeois village terrorized by a roving gang of revolutionists. The head of the gang, the grotesquely caricatured Peter Verkhovensky (David Collings), was based on real-life rebel Sergei Nechayev, who thought nothing of selling out friends and family alike for the good of "the cause." The actual protagonist of the piece was not, however, the insanely nihilistic Verkhovensky, but the mild-mannered, aristocratic Stavrogin (Keith Bell), whose phlegmatic personality may well have been a smokescreen for a revolutionary spirit of uncommon fervence. Though intended as a burlesque of those who would topple the Czarist regime, the novel curiously reemerged as a paragon of "rebellious idealism" (in the words of critic Irving Howe) to the radical youths of the 1960s and 1970s. Reedited as a six-parter, The Possessed was seen in America as a component of PBS' Masterpiece Theatre beginning May 2, 1971. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Keith BellAnne Stallybrass, (more)
1970  
 
Add The Six Wives of Henry VIII to QueueAdd The Six Wives of Henry VIII to top of Queue
The Six Wives of Henry VIII is a six-part BBC presentation first telecast in England in early 1971. After a successful run in Canada, the production settled into a CBS network berth beginning August 1, 1971. Keith Michell stars as King Henry in each of the series' 90-minute installments, which trace the monarch's lives and loves from age 18 to his dotage. The six wives are played by Annette Crosbie (Catherine of Aragon), Dorothy Tutin (Anne Boleyn), Anne Stallybrass (Jane Seymour), Elvi Hale (Anne of Cleves), Angela Pleasence (Catherine Howard), and Rosalie Crutchley (Catherine Parr). Adapted for television by Rosemary Anne Sisson and narrated for its CBS run by Anthony Quayle, The Six Wives of Henry VIII scored a considerable ratings coup, and was rebroadcast on PBS' Masterpiece Theatre in 1972. That same year, Mitchell starred in a related theatrical-film effort, Henry VIII and His Six Wives. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Keith Michell

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