Jesús Franco: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Spanish filmmaker, composer, and actor (1930–2013)}} |
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{{more citations needed|date=June 2016}} |
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{{family name hatnote|Franco|Manera|lang=Spanish}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}} |
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{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
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| name |
| name = Jesús Franco |
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| image |
| image = Jess Franco 2008.jpg |
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| caption |
| caption = Franco at the 2008 [[:fr:Fantastic'Arts 2008|''Fantastic'Arts'' festival]], [[Gérardmer]], France |
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| birthname |
| birthname = Jesús Franco Manera |
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| birth_date |
| birth_date = {{birth date|1930|5|12|df=y}} |
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| birth_place |
| birth_place = [[Madrid]], Spain |
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| death_date |
| death_date = {{death date and age|2013|4|2|1930|5|12|df=y}} |
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| death_place |
| death_place = [[Málaga]], [[Andalusia]], Spain |
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| occupation |
| occupation = {{hlist|[[film director|Director]]|[[screenwriter]]|producer|[[cinematographer]]|musician|composer|actor|editor}} |
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| years_active |
| years_active = 1954–2013 |
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| spouse |
| spouse = {{ubl|Nicole Guettard ({{circa|1962}}–1980)|{{marriage|[[Lina Romay]]|25 April 2008}}}} |
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| children = Caroline Riviere (stepdaughter from first marriage) |
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| relatives = [[Julián Marías]] (brother-in-law)<br>[[Ricardo Franco]] (nephew) |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Jesús Franco Manera''' (12 May 1930 – 2 April 2013), also commonly known as '''Jess Franco''', was a Spanish filmmaker, composer, and actor, known as a highly-prolific director of low-budget [[exploitation film|exploitation]] and [[B-movie]]s.<ref name="thrower1" /> He worked in many different genres during his career, but was best known for his [[Horror film|horror]] and [[Erotic art|erotic]] films, often incorporating [[Surrealist cinema|surrealist]] elements.<ref name="thrower1" /> |
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In a career spanning from 1954 to 2013, he wrote, directed, produced, acted in, and scored approximately 173 feature films,<ref name="thrower1" />{{efn| Sources list only 173 films in Franco's filmography. Other titles listed were simply re-edited or censored versions of the same films, adapted for different markets.}} working both in his native Spain and (during the rule of [[Francisco Franco]]) in France, West Germany, Switzerland and Portugal. Additionally, during the 1960s, he made several films in Rio de Janeiro and Istanbul.<ref name="thrower1" /> |
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==Biography== |
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{{more citations needed|section|date=March 2018}} |
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Of Cuban and Mexican parentage<ref>Stephen Thrower, Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco (2015)</ref>, Franco was born in [[Madrid, Spain|Madrid]] and studied at the city's Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográficas and the [[Institut des hautes études cinématographiques]] in [[Paris]].<ref>https://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/apr/05/jesus-franco</ref> He began his career in 1954 (aged 24) as an assistant director in the Spanish film industry, performing many tasks including composing music for some of the films as well as co-writing a number of the screenplays. He assisted a number of directors such as [[Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent]], [[Leon Klimovsky]] and [[Juan Antonio Bardem]]. After working on more than 20 films, he decided to get into directing films in 1959, making a few musicals and a crime drama called ''Red Lips''. |
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Franco's films are known for distinctive visual style and idiosyncratic approach to filmmaking, often directing multiple films concurrently.<ref name="thrower1" /><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |date=2015-05-12 |title=The Strange Case Of Jess Franco |url=https://www.austinfilm.org/2015/05/the-strange-case-of-jess-franco/ |access-date=2024-05-25 |website=Austin Film Society |language=en}}</ref> Despite mixed critical reception during his lifetime, Franco's work has gained a dedicated [[cult following]], and he is regarded as a significant figure in the history of exploitation cinema.<ref name="thrower1" /><ref name=":1" /> In 2009, he received an [[Honorary Goya Award]] from the [[Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain]] for his contributions to Spanish cinema.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2008-11-21 |title=Erotic horror king Franco to receive Lifetime Achievement Goya |url=https://cineuropa.org/en/newsdetail/88039/ |access-date=2024-05-25 |website=Cineuropa - the best of european cinema |language=en}}</ref> |
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In 1960, Franco took Marius Lesoeur and Sergio Newman, two producer friends, to a cinema to see the newly released [[Hammer Film Productions|Hammer]] horror film ''[[The Brides of Dracula]]'' and the three men decided to get into the horror film business. His career took off in 1961 with ''[[The Awful Dr. Orloff]]'' (a.k.a. ''Gritos en la noche''), which received wide distribution in the United States and the UK. Franco wrote and directed ''Orloff'', and even supplied some of the music for the film. In the mid-1960s, he went on to direct two other horror films, then proceeded to turn out a number of [[James Bond]]-like spy thrillers and softcore sex films based on the works of the [[Marquis de Sade]] (which remained one of his major influences throughout his career). |
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== Early life and education == |
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Although he had some American box office success with ''Necronomicon'' (1967), ''99 Women'' (1968) and two 1969 [[Christopher Lee]] films — ''The Bloody Judge'' and ''[[Count Dracula (1969 film)|Count Dracula]]'' — he never achieved wide commercial success. Many of his films were only distributed in Europe, and most of them were never dubbed into English. After discovering [[Soledad Miranda]] (he first used her in his ''Count Dracula''), Franco moved from Spain to France in 1969 so that he could make more violent and erotic films free of the strict censorship in Spain, and it was at this point that his career began to go downhill commercially as he turned to low-budget filmmaking with an accent on adult material. Soledad Miranda starred in a series of six erotic thrillers for Franco, all made within a one-year period (including ''[[Vampyros Lesbos]]''), after which she was killed in a tragic automobile accident in Portugal in 1970, just as her career was taking off. |
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'''Jesús Franco Manera''' was born in [[Madrid]] on 12 May 1930, to a prominent family of [[Cubans|Cuban]] and [[Mexicans|Mexican]] origin.<ref name="thrower1" /> His brother, Enrique Franco, was the vice president of the [[Albéniz Foundation]]. Via his sister Dolores, Franco was the brother-in-law of philosopher [[Julián Marías]], and the uncle of filmmaker [[Ricardo Franco]]. |
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A lifelong [[jazz]] enthusiast and pianist, Franco studied music at the [[Madrid Royal Conservatory]] and the Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu, before embarking on a film career. He studied at Madrid's Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográficas, and the [[Institut des hautes études cinématographiques]] in Paris.<ref name="guardian" /> He cited among his influences [[Luis Buñuel]], [[Stanley Donen]], [[Vincente Minnelli]], and [[Orson Welles]].<ref name="thrower1" /> |
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A year or two after Soledad Miranda died, a grieving Franco discovered a new leading lady in actress [[Lina Romay]]. At the time, the teenage Romay was married to a young actor/photographer named Ramon Ardid, but as she and Franco became more involved in their film projects together over the years, her marriage to Ramon ended in divorce around 1975. |
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During this time, he supported himself by working as a pianist in nightclubs and writing [[pulp novel]]s under the pen name 'David Khune', which he later adopted as one of his directing aliases. He also directed stage plays. |
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Franco was married at the time to Nicole Guettard (their marriage running approximately from 1962 through 1980), Ms. Guettard being gradually replaced in Franco's life by Lina Romay (Nicole worked as a script consultant on many of Franco's films while they were married, and even acted in a few of them. Her daughter from an earlier marriage, Caroline Riviere, also appeared in a few Franco films in the early 1970s (including the risque ''Exorcisme'' and ''The Perverse Countess'')). |
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==Career== |
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Franco and Lina Romay worked together for 40 years, and lived together from 1980 onward, although they were only ''officially'' married on 25 April, 2008. Until her death in 2012 (from cancer at age 57), Romay was his most regular actress, as well as his life companion and muse. Although Romay was listed in the credits of several films as a co-director, actor Antonio Mayans stated in a recent interview that Franco used to credit her in that manner for business reasons, although she never actually co-directed any of their films together. |
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Franco began his career in 1954 (aged 24) as an assistant director in the Spanish film industry, performing many tasks including composing music for some films as well as co-writing a number of the screenplays. He assisted directors such as [[Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent]], [[León Klimovsky]] and [[Juan Antonio Bardem]]. After working on more than 20 films for other directors, he decided to get into directing films himself in 1959, making a few musicals and a crime drama called ''Red Lips''. |
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In 1960, Franco took Marius Lesoeur and Sergio Newman, two producer friends, to a cinema to see the newly released [[Hammer Film Productions|Hammer]] horror film ''[[The Brides of Dracula]]'' and the three men decided to go into the horror film business. His career took off in 1962 with ''[[The Awful Dr. Orloff]]'' (a.k.a. ''Gritos en la noche''), which received wide distribution in the USA and the United Kingdom. Franco wrote and directed ''Orloff'', and even supplied some of the music for the film. In the mid-1960s, he went on to direct two other horror films, then proceeded to turn out a number of [[James Bond]]-like spy thrillers and softcore sex films based on the works of the [[Marquis de Sade]] (which remained one of his major influences throughout his career). |
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Although he produced a number of relatively successful horror films in the early 70's (''Dracula vs. Frankenstein'', ''[[The Bare-Breasted Countess]]'', ''[[A Virgin Among the Living Dead]]''), many people in the industry considered him a porn director due to the huge number of X-rated adult films he began turning out (even his 70's horror films featured abundant nudity). Franco returned to low-budget horror in a brief comeback period from 1980-83 (''Mondo Cannibale'', ''Bloody Moon'', ''Oasis of the Zombies'', ''Revenge in the House of Usher''), but after 1983, his career took a second downturn as he returned to making mostly pornographic films, most of which left nothing to the imagination. |
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Although he had some American box office success with ''[[Necronomicon - Geträumte Sünden]]'' (1968), ''[[99 Women]]'' (1969) and two 1969 [[Christopher Lee]] films – ''[[The Bloody Judge (film)|The Bloody Judge]]'' and ''[[Count Dracula (1969 film)|Count Dracula]]'' – he never achieved wide commercial success. Many of his films were only distributed in Europe, and most of them were never dubbed into English. |
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In his later years, he did, however, get the opportunity to turn out two rather big-budget horror films — ''[[Faceless (film)|Faceless]]'' (1988) and ''Killer Barbys'' (1996) — both of which showed what great work he could still do when his projects were adequately funded. The entirety of his work after 1996 was direct-to-video films of very low quality, none of which were distributed theatrically. Romay died of cancer in 2012 at age 57, after which Franco died in April, 2013 from natural causes, at age 82.<ref>http://www.sensacine.com/noticias/cine/noticia-18511350 "Muere Jess Franco, padre de la serie B española"], sensacine.com; accessed 26 March 2018.{{es icon}}</ref> |
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=== With Soledad Miranda === |
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Franco sometimes worked under various [[pseudonym]]s, including '''David Khune''' and '''Frank Hollmann'''. A fan of [[Jazz|jazz music]] (and a musician himself), many of his pseudonyms were taken from jazz musicians such as [[Clifford Brown]] and [[James P. Johnson]]. |
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After discovering [[Soledad Miranda]] (he first used her in his film ''Count Dracula''), Franco moved from Spain to France in 1969 so that he could make more violent and erotic films free of the strict censorship in Spain at the time, and it was at this point that his career began to go downhill commercially as he turned to low-budget filmmaking with an accent on adult material. Miranda starred in a series of six erotic thrillers for Franco, all made within a one-year period (one of which ''Sex Charade'' was never released), after which she was killed in a tragic automobile accident in Portugal in 1970 just as her career was taking off. She and Franco had started filming her next project (''Justine'') which he abandoned entirely after her death. (Only about 40 minutes of the movie was shot at the time of her death). He had also planned to feature her in his next film, ''X312: Flight to Hell'', which he made with another actress.<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015">Stephen Thrower, ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco'' (2015)</ref> |
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=== With Lina Romay === |
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Franco's themes often revolved around [[lesbian vampire]]s, [[women in prison films|women in prison]], surgical horror, sadomasochism, zombies and sexploitation (including several films based on the writings of the [[Marquis de Sade]]). He worked in other [[exploitation film]] genres, such as [[cannibal film]]s, spy films, [[giallo]], crime films, science fiction, jungle adventure, Oriental menace, exorcist films, war movies, historical dramas and [[nunsploitation]]. His sex movies often contained long, uninterrupted shots of nude women writhing around on beds. Most of his hardcore films starred his lifelong companion [[Lina Romay]], who admitted in interviews to being an exhibitionist. |
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A year or two after Miranda died, a grieving Franco discovered a new leading lady in actress [[Lina Romay]]. At the time, the teenage Romay was married to a young actor/photographer named Ramon Ardid (aka "Raymond Hardy"), who co-starred with Lina in 19 Franco films in the 1970s. But as Romay and Franco became more involved in their film projects together over the years, her marriage to Ardid broke up in 1975 and ended in divorce in 1978 (Ardid continued working with Franco however until 1979).<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> |
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Franco in adult film ''Sexorcismes'' (1975) was involved in a non-simulated sex scene with Romay.<ref>''"The close-ups of his penetrating penis, tongue and fingers in Sexorcismes provide rudimentary hypervisibility but seem contrived."'' Ward, Glenn: [https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/2710177.pdf Journeys into Perversion: Vision, Desire and Economies of Transgression in the Films of Jess Franco.] University of Sussex, May 2011. p. 200.</ref> |
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Franco was known for his use of a [[hand-held camera]] and [[zoom lens|zoom]] shots, which he felt lent realism to his films. He also was not averse to filming several movies at the same time, knocking together a second feature on the unsuspecting producer's dime. Many of his actors only found out years after the fact that Franco had actually starred them in films for which they had never even been paid. |
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Franco was married at the time to Nicole Guettard (their marriage running approximately from 1962 to 1980), Ms. Guettard being gradually replaced in Franco's life by Romay. Guettard worked as a script consultant on some of Franco's films while they were married (sometimes credited as Nicole Franco), and even acted in a few of them. Her daughter from an earlier marriage, Caroline Riviere, also acted in a few Franco films in the early 1970s (including the risqué ''Exorcisme'' and ''The Perverse Countess''). Guettard died in 1996. |
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His main claim to fame, however, is that he managed to write and direct around 160 motion pictures in his lifetime, encompassing a wide swath of different genres, with practically no financial backing available to him. (Note* - Some sources which list as many as 200 titles in Franco's filmography are relisting the same films several times under different variant titles). |
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Franco and Romay worked together for 40 years, and lived together from 1980 onward, although they were only ''officially'' married on 25 April 2008. Until her death in 2012 (from cancer, aged 57), Romay was his most regular actress, as well as his life companion and muse. Romay starred in approximately 109 Jesús Franco films, more than any other actor or actress. Although Romay was listed in the credits of several films as a co-director, actor [[Antonio Mayans]] stated in a recent interview that Franco used to credit her in that manner for business reasons, although she never actually co-directed any of their films together.<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> |
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Franco attracted a circle of bizarre but loyal actors and technicians who moved with him over the years from project to project (while receiving very little, if any, money for their efforts). Many of his actors were over-the-hill performers in the twilight of their careers, many of his actresses shameless exhibitionists. He frequently worked with genre actors [[Howard Vernon]], [[Paul Müller (actor)|Paul Müller]], [[Christopher Lee]], [[Jack Taylor (actor)|Jack Taylor]], [[Ewa Stromberg]], [[Soledad Miranda]], [[Maria Rohm]], [[Monica Swinn]], [[William Berger (actor)|William Berger]], [[Dennis Price]], [[Alice Arno]], Montserrat Prous, Alberto Dalbes, Britt Nichols, Pamela Stanford, Kali Hansa and [[Klaus Kinski]], all of whom are well-known to cult film collectors. |
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Although he produced a number of relatively successful horror films in the early 1970s (''Dracula vs. Frankenstein'', ''[[The Bare-Breasted Countess]]'', ''[[A Virgin Among the Living Dead]]''), many people in the industry considered him a porn director due to the huge number of X-rated adult films he began turning out (even his 1970s horror films featured abundant nudity). Franco returned to low-budget horror films in a brief comeback period from 1980 to 1983 (''Mondo Cannibale'', ''Bloody Moon'', ''Oasis of the Zombies'', ''Mansion of the Living Dead'' and ''Revenge in the House of Usher''), but after 1983, his career took a second downturn as he returned to making mostly pornographic films, most of which left nothing to the imagination. |
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In his later years, he did, however, get the opportunity to turn out two rather big-budget horror films – ''[[Faceless (1988 film)|Faceless]]'' (1988) and ''Killer Barbys'' (1996) – both of which showed what great work he could still do when his projects were adequately funded. The entirety of his work after 1996 (beginning with ''Tender Flesh'') was shot-on-video films of very low quality, none of which were distributed theatrically. Romay died of cancer in 2012 at age 57, after which Franco died on April 2, 2013, from natural causes at age 82.<ref name="sensacine" /> |
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===''Zombie Lake'' vs. ''Oasis of the Zombies''=== |
===''Zombie Lake'' vs. ''Oasis of the Zombies''=== |
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Franco was supposed to write |
Franco was supposed to write and direct a film for Eurocine Productions in 1980 called ''Lake of the Living Dead'' (a horror film about revived Nazi zombies) but after submitting the basic plot summary, he fell out with the producers, Marius and Daniel Lesoeur, over the ridiculously low budget he was allotted, and the producers immediately hired French horror film director [[Jean Rollin]] to direct it (later re-titling it ''[[Zombie Lake]]''). |
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The Lesoeurs later had Rollin shoot new zombie footage in 1981 to be added to Franco's ''[[A Virgin Among the Living Dead]]'' (1973) for its 1981 |
The Lesoeurs later had Rollin shoot new (zombie) footage in 1981 to be added to Franco's ''[[A Virgin Among the Living Dead]]'' (1973) for its 1981 theatrical rerelease. Franco's original director's cut of the film was later made available on DVD.<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> |
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Franco later directed another film for the Lesouers called ''[[Oasis of the Zombies]]'' (a.k.a. ''Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies'' on VHS) in 1981, which had a plot very similar to ''[[Zombie Lake]]'' (also involving revived Nazi zombies). Franco simultaneously shot a variant version of ''Oasis of the Zombies'' |
Franco later directed another film for the Lesouers called ''[[Oasis of the Zombies]]'' (a.k.a. ''Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies'' on VHS) in 1981, which had a plot very similar to ''[[Zombie Lake]]'' (also involving revived Nazi zombies). It was released in France as ''The Abyss of the Living Dead''.<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> Franco simultaneously shot a variant Spanish-language version of ''Oasis of the Zombies'' at the producers' expense, starring Lina Romay and his "regulars", which was apparently released only in Spain in 1982 as ''La Tumba de los Muertos Vivientes''.<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> |
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==Filmmaking style and themes== |
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===Death=== |
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Franco sometimes worked under various [[pseudonym]]s, including '''David Khune''' and '''Frank Hollmann'''. A fan of [[Jazz|jazz music]] (and a musician himself), many of his pseudonyms were taken from jazz musicians such as [[Clifford Brown]] and [[James P. Johnson]]. |
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Franco suffered a severe stroke on 27 March 2013, and was taken to a hospital in [[Málaga]], Spain, where he died six days later, on the morning of 2 April. He was 82 years old.<ref>[https://books.google.ca/books?id=MoHGCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA119&dq=jesus+franco+stroke&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjtoqnJ0bffAhXNHzQIHUo9DQIQ6AEILzAB#v=onepage&q=jesus%20franco%20stroke&f=false ''Obituaries in the Performing Arts''], google.ca; accessed 3 February 2019.</ref> |
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Franco's themes often revolved around [[lesbian vampire]]s, [[Women in prison films|women in prison]], surgical horror, sadomasochism, [[zombie]]s and sexploitation (including numerous films based on the writings of the [[Marquis de Sade]]). He worked in other [[exploitation film]] genres, such as [[cannibal film]]s, spy films, [[giallo]], crime films, science fiction, jungle adventure, Oriental menace, exorcist films, war movies, historical dramas and [[nunsploitation]]. His sex movies often contained long, uninterrupted shots of nude women writhing around on beds. Most of his hardcore films starred his lifelong companion [[Lina Romay]] (sometimes billed as "Candy Coster" or "Lulu Laverne"), who admitted in interviews to being an exhibitionist. |
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Franco was known for his use of a [[hand-held camera]] and [[Zoom lens|zoom]] shots, which he felt lent realism to his films. He also was not averse to filming several movies at the same time, knocking together a second feature on the unsuspecting producer's dime. Many of his actors only found out years after the fact that Franco had actually starred them in films for which they had never even been paid. |
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His main claim to fame, however, is that he managed to direct approximately 173 motion pictures in his lifetime,<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> encompassing a wide swathe of different genres with practically no financial backing available to him. (Note: Some sources which list as many as 200 titles in Franco's filmography are relisting the same films several times under their different variant titles.) |
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Sometimes referred to as the "European Ed Wood",<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.abaa.org/book/727281332|title = Obsession: The Films of Jess Franco (First Edition) by Lucas and Peter Blumenstock Balbo (Editors); Howard Vernon (Foreword); Carlos Aguilar, Jack Taylor, William Berger, Monica Swinn, Jess Franco (Contributors) | Search for rare books | ABAA}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://remezcla.com/film/jesus-franco-the-spanish-master-of-1970s-softcore-horror-porn-throwback-thursday/|title = Remembering Jesus Franco, the Spanish Master of 1970s Softcore Horror|date = 30 October 2014}}</ref> Franco similarly attracted a circle of bizarre but loyal actors and technicians who moved with him over the years from project to project (while receiving very little, if any, money for their efforts). Many of his actors were over-the-hill performers in the twilight of their careers, many of his actresses brazen exhibitionists. He frequently worked with genre actors Lina Romay (who appeared in 109 Franco films), Antonio Mayans (who appeared in 50 Franco films),<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> [[Howard Vernon]] (who appeared in 40 Franco films),<ref name="Stephen Thrower 2015"/> [[Paul Müller (actor)|Paul Müller]] (who appeared in 15 Franco films), [[Monica Swinn]] (who appeared in 15 Franco films), and [[Christopher Lee]] (who appeared in 7 Franco films). His frequent cast members also included [[Jack Taylor (actor)|Jack Taylor]], [[Ewa Strömberg]], Anne Libert, [[Soledad Miranda]], [[Maria Rohm]], [[William Berger (actor)|William Berger]], [[Dennis Price]], Olivier Mathot, Muriel Montosse (a.k.a. Victoria Adams), [[Alice Arno]], Montserrat Prous, [[Alberto Dalbés]], Britt Nichols, Pamela Stanford, Mabel Escaño, Kali Hansa, Carmen Carrión and [[Klaus Kinski]], all of whom are well known to Euro horror film historians. |
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== Death == |
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Franco suffered a severe stroke on 27 March 2013, and was taken to a hospital in [[Málaga]], Spain, where he died six days later, on the morning of 2 April. He was 82.<ref name="obit" /> |
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== Filmography == |
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{{Main|Jesús Franco filmography}} |
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==See also== |
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* [[Jesús Franco's unrealized projects]] |
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==Notes== |
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== Filmography (in order of production) == |
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{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} |
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(all films directed by Franco unless noted otherwise) |
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{| border="2" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border:1px #aaa solid; border-collapse:collapse; font-size:95%" |
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! colspan=4 style="background:LightSteelBlue"| Films |
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|- bgcolor="#CCCCCC" align="center" |
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! Year |
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! Title |
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! Alternative title(s) |
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! Notes |
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|- |
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| 1959 |
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| ''We're Eighteen'' ||''{{ill|Tenemos 18 años|es}}'' || Comedy/fantasy written and co-scored by Franco; starred Isana Medel, [[Antonio Ozores]] and Antonio Escribano; never distributed outside of Spain |
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|- |
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| rowspan=2 | 1960 |
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| ''Red Lips''||''Labios Rojos'' · ''Opération Lèvres Rouges'' / ''Operation Red Lips'' || crime drama co-written by Franco with Manuel Pilares; starred Isana Medel, Ana Castor and Antonio Escribano; distributed only in Spain, Belgium and France |
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|- |
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| ''[[Queen of the Tabarin Club]]'' ||''La Reina del Tabarin'' · ''Mariquita la Belle de Tabarin'' (black-and-white re-edited French version)|| Franco's first film produced by Marius Lesoeur (of Eurocine) and Sergio Newman; starred [[Mikaela (actress)|Mikaela]], [[Yves Massard]] (and [[Soledad Miranda]] in a very small, uncredited role); distributed only in Spain, Belgium and France |
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|- |
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| rowspan=2 | 1961 |
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| ''Vampiresas 1930''||''Gold Diggers of 1930'' . ''Volando Hacia la Fama'' / ''Flying Towards Fame'' . ''Certains les preferent noires''/ ''Some Like it Black''|| produced by Marius Lesoeur and Sergio Newman; starred [[Mikaela (actress)|Mikaela]], [[Yves Massard]] and [[Antonio Ozores]]; distributed only in Spain and France |
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|- |
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| ''[[The Awful Dr. Orloff]]'' ||''Gritos en la Noche'' / ''Screams in the Night'' · ''El doctor demonio'' / ''The Demon Doctor'' · ''L'Horrible Dr. Orlof'' . ''Il Diabolico Dottor Satana'' . ''Schreie durch die Nacht'' / ''Der schreckliche Dr. Orloff''|| produced by Marius Lesoeur, Sergio Newman and Leo Lax; written by Jesus Franco; starred [[Howard Vernon]], [[Diana Lorys]], [[Conrado San Martín]], [[Perla Cristal]] and Ricardo Valle; Franco's first film to be released internationally, dubbed in English |
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|- |
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| rowspan=3 | 1962 |
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| ''Death Whistles a Blues''||''La muerte silba un blues'' · ''Agent 077, opération Jamaïque'' · ''077 Operation Sexy'' (a later, re-edited French cut containing extra sexy footage shot by Franco)|| co-written by Franco; co-produced by Nazario Belmar and Marius Lesoeur; starred [[Conrado San Martín]], [[Gérard Tichy]], Danick Patisson, [[Georges Rollin]] and [[Perla Cristal]]; distributed only in Spain and France; Franco remade this film in 1973 as ''Kiss Me, Killer''<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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|- |
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| ''The Shadow of Zorro'' || ''La sombra del Zorro'' · ''La venganza del Zorro'' · ''La espada del Zorro'' · ''L'Ombre de Zorro'' || Franco wrote the screenplay for this film, but did not direct it |
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|- |
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| ''The Sadistic Baron von Klaus'' ||''Le sadique Baron von Klaus'' · ''La Mano de un Hombre Muerto'' / ''Hand of a Dead Man'' · ''Le Sadique'' / ''The Sadist'' · ''Hysterical Sadique'' · ''La Bestia del Castello Maldetto'' / ''Beast of the Cursed Castle'' · ''Sinfonia Per Un Sadico'' / ''Symphony for a Sadist'' || starred Howard Vernon, Hugo Blanco, Georges Rollin and Gogo Rojo; produced by Franco, Jose Lopez-Brea and Marius Lesoeur; featured Daniel White's first music score for Franco; distributed only in Spain, France and Italy; Franco married his first wife Nicole Guettard around this time |
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|- |
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| rowspan=2 | 1963 |
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| ''Rififi in the City''||''Rififi en la ciudad'' (''Rumble in the City'') · ''Vous souvenez vous de Paco?'' / ''Do You Remember Paco?'' · ''Chasse a la Maffia'' / Hunt for the Mafia'' · ''Una Spia Sulla Cita'' / ''A Spy in the City'' || based on the 1958 Charles Exbrayat novel ''Do You Remember Paco?''; co-produced by Franco and Jose Lopez-Brea; starred Jean Servais, Fernando Fernan Gomez, Antonio Escribano and Laura Granados; music by Daniel White; distributed only in Spain, France and Italy |
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| ''The Jaguar''|| ''El Llanero'' / ''The Plainsman'' · ''Sfida Selvaggio'' / ''Savage Challenge'' · ''Le Jaguar'' || Zorro-type western written by Franco and Nicole Guettard (Franco's then-wife); co-produced by Marius Lesoeur and Julian Esteban; starred José Suárez, Silvia Sorrente and Georges Rollin; music by Daniel White; distributed only in Spain, France and Italy |
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| rowspan=2 | 1964 |
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| ''El Extraño Viaje''||''The Strange Journey'' (translation)''|| directed by Fernando Fernan Gomez; Franco did not write or direct this film, but he had a major acting role in it |
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| ''The Secret of Dr. Orloff'' ||''El Secreto del Dr. Orloff'' · ''Le Amanti del Dottor Jekyll'' / ''The Lovers of Dr. Jekyll'' / ''Die Geliebten des Dr. Jekyll'' · ''Dr. Orloff's Monster'' (AIP's 1966 dubbed U.S. TV print) · ''Les Maitresses du Dr. Jekyll'' / ''The Mistresses of Dr. Jekyll'' (this French version, now available on DVD in the U.S., contained a few extra scenes added by Franco in 1965) || co-written by Franco and Nicole Guettard; produced by Leo Lax and Marius Lesoeur; starred Hugo Blanco, Agnes Spaak, Perla Cristal and Marcelo Arroita Jauregui; music by Daniel White; theatrically released in Spain, France and Italy; dubbed in English and distributed directly to American TV via AIP |
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| rowspan=4 | 1965 |
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| ''Treasure Island'' ||''La Isla del Tesoro''||unfinished; this film was supposed to star Orson Welles (as Long John Silver), Sir John Gielgud and Fernando Rey; Welles wrote the screenplay and wanted Franco to co-direct it with him after viewing Franco's film ''Rififi in the City'' |
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| ''Chimes at Midnight'' ||''Campanadas a Medianoche'' · ''Falstaff'' (U.S. release title) ||film starred Orson Welles (as Falstaff), Jeanne Moreau, Sir John Gielgud, Fernando Rey (and Ingrid Pitt in a cameo); co-produced by Harry (''[[Goldfinger (film)|Goldfinger]]'') Saltzman; Franco was second unit director, mainly handling the battle scenes filmed in Madrid; dubbed in English and shown theatrically in the U.S. as ''Falstaff'' |
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| ''[[The Diabolical Dr. Z]]'' ||''Le Diabolique Docteur Z'' · ''Miss Muerte'' / ''Miss Death'' · ''Dans les Griffes du Maniaque'' / ''In the Grip of the Maniac'' · ''Das Geheimnis des Dr. Z'' / ''The Secret of Dr. Z'' || written by Jean-Claude Carriere (from Franco's plot); produced by Serge Silberman, Carlos Couret and Michel Safra; starred Estella Blain, Mabel Karr, Howard Vernon, Marcelo Arroita Jauregui, Jesus Franco, Antonio Escribano and Daniel White; music by Daniel White; dubbed in English and released theatrically in the U.S. in 1967 |
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| ''[[077 Intrigue in Lisbon]]''||''[[Espionage in Lisbon]]'' . ''Mision Lisboa''||directed by Tulio Demicheli; Franco co-wrote this film, but did not direct it; starred Brett Halsey and Fernando Rey; music by Daniel White |
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| rowspan=3 | 1966 |
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| ''Attack of the Robots''||''Cartes Sur Table'' / ''Cards on the Table'' · ''Cartas Boca Arriba'' / ''Cards Face Up'' · ''James Clint sfida Interpol'' / ''James Clint Challenges Interpol'' || Franco's last black-and-white film; starred Eddie Constantine, Marcelo Arroita Jauregui, Antonio Escribano and Fernando Rey; written by Jean-Claude Carriere (from Franco's plot); produced by Serge Silberman, Carlos Couret and Michel Saffra; dubbed in English and distributed directly to American TV in 1967 |
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| ''Residence for Spies''||''Residencia Para Espias'' · ''Les Mignonnes'' / ''The Darlings'' · ''Golden Horn'' (Franco's original title) || starred Eddie Constantine, Diana Lorys, Patty Shepard, Marcelo Arroita Jauregui, Howard Vernon & Antonio Escribano; co-produced by Luis Laso, Carlos Couret (and Eddie Constantine when the other two ran out of funds); based on a Michael Logan novel ''Dan Leyton chez les Chatelaines''; Howard Vernon was inserted into the film in one scene without his knowledge and he said that he almost sued Franco later; distributed only in Spain & France; an English-dubbed print titled ''Golden Horn'' was created but never shown anywhere, and is now apparently lost |
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| ''[[Lucky, the Inscrutable]]''||''Lucky el Intrepido'' · ''Agente Speciale L.K.'' · ''Operation Re Mida'' / ''Operation King Midas'' · ''Corrida Pour un Espion'' / ''Race For a Spy'' || co-produced by Artur Brauner; starred Ray Danton, Marcelo Arroita Jauregui, Rosalba Neri, Patty Shepard and Jesus Franco (playing three different cameo roles); Bruno Nicolai's first score for a Franco film; this was Franco's first German co-production and his first film with producer Artur Brauner; distributed only in Spain, France, Italy and Germany<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| rowspan=4 | 1967 |
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| ''[[Succubus (film)|Necronomicon]]'' ||''Necronomicon Getraumte Sunden'' / ''Necronomicon Dreamt Sin'' · ''Delirium'' · ''Succubus'' (1971 English language edit) || co-produced by Karl Heinz Mannchen, Adrian Hoven, Michel Lemoine and Pier Caminecci; written by Franco and Pier Caminecci (although Franco claimed that he wrote it by himself); starred Janine Reynaud, Michel Lemoine (Reynaud's husband), Jack Taylor, Adrian Hoven and Howard Vernon; music by Jerry Van Rooyen; shot in Portugal and West Germany; Franco's first film with both Mannchen and Adrian Hoven; dubbed in English and distributed worldwide, except in Spain due to censorship problems |
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| ''Red Lips Sadisterotica''||''Rote Lippen Sadisterotica'' · ''El Caso de las Dos Bellezas'' / ''The Case of the Two Beauties'' · ''Two Avenging Angels'' . ''Two Undercover Angels'' (U.S. DVD title)|| co-produced by Pier Caminecci, Adrian Hoven and Karl Heinz Mannchen; music by Jerry Van Rooyen; starred Janine Reynaud, Rossana Yanni, Adrian Hoven, Marcel Arroita Jauregui and Michel Lemoine; dubbed in English and shown theatrically in the U.S. in 1972 |
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| ''[[Kiss Me Monster]]''||''Besame Monstruo'' · ''Das Schloss der Gehenkten'' / ''Castle of the Hanged Men'' · ''Castle of the Doomed'' || filmed back-to-back with ''Red Lips Sadisterotica''; co-produced by Pier Caminecci, Adrian Hoven and Karl Heinz Mannchen; starred Janine Reynaud, Rossana Yanni, Adrian Hoven, Michel Lemoine, Jesus Franco (and producer Mannchen in a cameo); music by Jerry Van Rooyen; featured a very brief cameo by Caroline Riviere (Franco's step-daughter); dubbed in English and shown theatrically in the U.S. in 1972 |
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| ''In the Castle of Bloody Lust''||''Im Schloss der Blutigen Begierde'' . ''Castle of Lust'' · ''Castle of the Creeping Flesh'' (U.S. title) || starred Howard Vernon, Janine Reynaud & Michel Lemoine; Franco provided the original plot and was scheduled to direct this film, but he went to Brazil instead to direct ''The Blood of Fu Manchu'' for Harry Alan Towers, so producer Adrian Hoven directed the film himself |
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| rowspan=5 | 1968 |
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| ''[[Eve (1968 film)|Eve]]''||''Eva en la Selva'' / ''Eve in the Jungle'' · ''The Face of Eve'' · ''La Femmina della Giungla'' . ''Diana, Daughter of the Wilderness'' || produced and written by Harry Alan Towers; starred Christopher Lee, Maria Rohm (Towers' wife) and Herbert Lom; according to Towers, Franco was an uncredited co-director brought in to finish the film in Brazil when the original director (Jeremy Summers) quit midway through production <ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_bXZBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA76&lpg=PA76&dq=eve+1968+jess+franco&source=bl&ots=WUrh0b1_YO&sig=D9QLMn2X167lEr6xIKUD0vGS9GE&hl=en&sa=X&ei=eVWIVLHgKfKv7AajxYHIAQ&ved=0CFAQ6AEwBw#v=onepage&q=eve%201968%20jess%20franco&f=false|title=Harry Alan Towers|publisher=}}</ref> |
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| ''[[The Blood of Fu Manchu]]'' ||''Fu Manchu y el Beso de la Muerte'' / ''Fu Manchu and the Kiss of Death'' · ''Der Todeskuss des Dr. Fu Manchu'' / ''The Death Kiss of Dr. Fu Manchu'' · ''Sax Rohmer's Kiss and Kill'' (U.S. theatrical title) · ''Against All Odds'' (original U.S. video release title)|| produced and co-written by Harry Alan Towers, based on the Dr. [[Fu Manchu]] novels by Sax Rohmer; starred Christopher Lee, Richard Greene, Shirley Eaton and Maria Rohm (Towers' wife); music by Daniel White; filmed in Spain and Rio de Janeiro; Shirley Eaton said in interviews that she was not even aware that Franco had inserted footage of her into this film until years later, the footage apparently being taken from ''The Girl from Rio'' (1968) which Franco also directed; dubbed in English and distributed worldwide, except in Italy |
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| ''[[The Girl from Rio]]'' ||''La Ciudad sin Hombres'' / ''City Without Men'' · ''Sumuru Regina di Femina'' / ''Sumuru, Queen of Femina'' · ''Die Sieben Männer der Su-Muru'' / ''The Seven Men of Su-Muru'' · ''Rio 70'' · ''Future Women'' (U.S. TV title) · ''Mothers of America'' || produced and written by Harry Alan Towers, based on the [[Sumuru (character)|Sumuru]] novels by Sax Rohmer; starred Shirley Eaton, George Sanders, Maria Rohm (and Franco in a cameo); music by Daniel White; filmed in Spain and Rio de Janeiro; dubbed in English and distributed worldwide, except in England |
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| ''[[99 Women]]'' ||''99 Mujeres'' / ''99 Donne'' / ''99 Frauen'' · ''Der Heisse Tod'' / ''Hot Death'' · ''99 Femmes Perverses'' · ''Island of Despair'' (edited U.S. TV version) · ''Les Brulantes'' / ''The Burning Women'' (a 1974 French hardcore version) || co-produced by Harry Alan Towers; plotted and co-written by Franco; starred Herbert Lom, Maria Schell, Maria Rohm, Rosalba Neri, Luciana Paluzzi, Mercedes McCambridge (and Franco in two different cameos); music by Bruno Nicolai; filmed in Spain and Brazil, shot back-to-back with ''The Girl from Rio''; dubbed in English and released worldwide in 1969 (France in 1974) |
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| ''[[Marquis de Sade: Justine]]'' || ''Les Infortunes de la Vertu'' / ''The Misfortunes of Virtue'' · ''Justine and Juliet'' · ''Las Dos Bellezas'' / ''The Two Beauties'' · ''Dulce Justine'' / ''Sweet Justine'' · ''Deadly Sanctuary'' (U.S. video title) || co-written and co-produced by Harry Alan Towers, filmed in Barcelona; starred Jack Palance, Klaus Kinski, Howard Vernon, Romina Power, Akim Tamiroff, Rosalba Neri, Sylva Koscina, Maria Rohm, Gerard Tichy and Jesus Franco; music by Bruno Nicolai; Franco was furious that the producers forced him to use [[Romina Power]] in the lead role instead of his first choice, Rosemarie Dexter; dubbed in English and released theatrically worldwide, except for the U.S. (where it was only released direct-to-video in 1986 as ''Deadly Sanctuary'') |
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| rowspan=7 | 1969 |
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| ''[[The Castle of Fu Manchu]]''||''El Castillo de Fu Manchu'' · ''Der Folterkammer des Dr. Fu Manchu'' / ''The Torture Chamber of Dr. Fu Manchu'' · ''Assignment Istanbul'' (shooting title) || co-produced and co-written by Harry Alan Towers, based on the Dr. Fu Manchu novels by Sax Rohmer; starred Christopher Lee, Richard Greene, Maria Perschy, Herbert Fux and Rosalba Neri (and Franco in a cameo); shot in Barcelona with lots of stock footage from other films; dubbed in English and released worldwide, except in France |
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| ''[[Venus in Furs (1969 Franco film)|Venus in Furs]]''||''Venus im Pelz'' · ''Black Angel'' (Franco's original working title) · ''Puo una morta revivere per amore?'' / ''Can a Dead Girl Live Again Through Love?'' · ''Paroxismus'' || co-produced by Harry Alan Towers and Alexander Hacohen; co-written by Franco and Malvin Wald; starred Klaus Kinski, James Darren, Dennis Price, Margaret Lee, Maria Rohm and Paul Muller; this was Franco's first film with Klaus Kinski, Dennis Price & Paul Muller; music by Manfred Mann, who appears in the film jamming with Franco; shot in Spain and Istanbul; Franco hated the way that his screenplay was mangled by the many co-writers that he was forced to work with and the psychedelic effects that were added to the U.S. release print; dubbed in English and released worldwide, except in France |
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| ''Eugenie, The Story of Her Journey into Perversion'' ||''Die Jungfrau und die Peitsche'' / ''The Virgin and the Whip'' · ''De Sade 70: Beaten and Loved'' · ''Les Inassouvies'' / ''The Insatiables'' · ''Philosophy in the Boudoir'' (U.K.)|| produced and written by Harry Alan Towers, based on the works of the Marquis de Sade; starred Christopher Lee, Jack Taylor, Marie Liljedahl, Maria Rohm, Herbert Fux and Paul Muller; music by Bruno Nicolai; Christopher Lee claimed that he did not even know that this was to be an X-rated film when he appeared in it (in spite of the title); Marie Liljedahl later said that she regretted appearing in adult films; distributed internationally except in Italy and Spain; later remade as ''Cocktail Special'' in 1978<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| ''[[The Bloody Judge (film)|The Bloody Judge]]'' ||''El Juez Sangriento'' · ''El Proceso de las Brujas'' / ''The Trial of the Witches'' · ''Il Truono di Fuoco'' / ''The Throne of Fire'' · ''Der Hexentöter von Blackmoor'' / ''The Witch-Killer of Blackmoor'' · ''De Sadistiche Rechter'' · ''Night of the Blood Monster'' (the U.S. theatrical title (which Franco absolutely hated)) || co-produced and plotted by Harry Alan Towers, based on the life of [[George Jeffreys, 1st Baron Jeffreys|Judge George Jeffreys]]; starred Christopher Lee, Howard Vernon, Maria Schell, Maria Rohm, Diana Lorys, Margaret Lee and Leo Genn; music by Bruno Nicolai; one of Franco's most widely distributed films; three different endings were filmed, as well as both "clothed" & "unclothed" edits to be used in different countries<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| ''[[Count Dracula (1970 film)|Count Dracula]]''||''El Conde Dracula'' / ''Il conte Dracula'' · ''Nachts wenn Dracula erwacht'' / ''Nights When Dracula Wakes'' · ''Le nuits de Dracula'' / ''The Nights of Dracula'' · ''Bram Stoker's Count Dracula'' · ''Bloodthirsty Dracula'' · ''Dracula '71'' || co-produced and co-written by Harry Alan Towers, based on the Bram Stoker novel; starred Christopher Lee, Klaus Kinski, Herbert Lom, Soledad Miranda, Fred Williams, Emma Cohen (uncredited), Jack Taylor and Paul Muller; music by Bruno Nicolai; Franco's first film with both Soledad Miranda and Fred Williams, and his last film with Harry Alan Towers; this was the only Dracula film that Christopher Lee said that he enjoyed starring in; Kinski said that he was tricked by Franco into appearing as Renfield in this film; one of Franco's most widely distributed films<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| ''Sex Charade''||''Like an Apocalypse'' (shooting title)· ''The Labyrinth'' || produced by Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Jesus Franco; starred Soledad Miranda, Paul Muller, Jack Taylor, Maria Rohm, Diana Lorys and Howard Vernon; music by Bruno Nicolai; the film was finished but never released (Franco said that even the negative was lost)<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| ''Nightmares Come at Night'' ||''Les Cauchemars Naissent la Nuit'' · ''Les yeux de la Nuit'' / ''Los Ojos de la Noche'' / ''The Eyes of the Night'' · ''Die Nackten Augen der Nacht'' · ''Sangre en la noche''|| produced by Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Jesus Franco; starred Diana Lorys, Maria Rohm, Paul Muller, Collette Jack, Jack Taylor and Soledad Miranda (in a small role); music by Bruno Nicolai; this film was only theatrically released in Belgium; later remade by Franco in 1972 as ''The Sinister Eyes of Dr. Orloff''<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
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| rowspan=6| 1970 |
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| ''Eugenie de Sade''||''Eugenie (de Sade)'' · ''Eugenie'' · ''Eugenia'' . ''De Sade 2000'' · ''Eugenie de Franval'' · ''Eugenie Sex Happening'' || produced by Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Jesus Franco, based on the works of the Marquis de Sade; starred Soledad Miranda, Paul Muller, [[Alice Arno]], Jesus Franco, Karl Heinz Mannchen (cameo); music by Bruno Nicolai; Franco's first film with Alice Arno; distributed only in France, Italy and Belgium |
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| ''[[Vampyros Lesbos]]'' ||''Erbin des Dracula'' / ''Heiress of Dracula'' · ''Sexualite Speciale'' . ''Las Vampiras'' (censored Spanish version) · ''El Signo del Vampiro'' (the film's original shooting title) || produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; starred Soledad Miranda (as Susann Korda), Ewa Stromberg, Dennis Price, Paul Muller and Jesus Franco; music by Manfred Hubler, [[Siegfried Schwab]] and Franco; shot in Spain, West Germany and Istanbul; distributed only in France, Germany and Spain; Franco later remade this film in 1981 as ''Macumba Sexual'' |
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| ''[[She Killed in Ecstasy]]''||''Sie Tötete in Ekstase'' · ''Mrs. Hyde'' · ''Crimes dans l'extase'' / ''Crimes of Ecstasy'' · ''Lewd in Ecstasy'' (France)|| produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Jesus Franco; starred [[Soledad Miranda]], Fred Williams, Ewa Stromberg, Paul Muller, Horst Tappert, Howard Vernon, Jesus Franco and Karl Heinz Mannchen (cameo); distributed only in France and Germany |
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| ''[[The Devil Came from Akasava]]''||''El Diablo que vino de Akasava'' · ''Der Teufel kam aus Akasava'' . ''The Devils of Caninde'' (shooting title) . ''Una venere senza nome per L'ispettore Forrester'' / ''A Nameless Love for Inspector Forrester'' || produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; starred Soledad Miranda, Alberto Dalbes, Fred Williams, Ewa Stromberg, Howard Vernon, Paul Muller, Horst Tappert, Siegfried Schurenberg and Karl Heinz Mannchen; based on a short story by Bryan Edgar Wallace; music by Manfred Hubler and Siegfried Schwab; this was Franco's first film with Alberto Dalbes; distributed only in Italy, Germany and Spain; Soledad Miranda was killed in a car accident soon after finishing this film in 1970 |
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| ''Juliette''||''Juliette de Sade'' || unfinished; this film was to be co-produced by Franco and Artur Brauner, and written by Franco, based on the works of the Marquis de Sade; it would have starred Paul Muller, Soledad Miranda, Alberto Dalbes and Franco, but the film was never completed due to Soledad Miranda's untimely death in 1970 |
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| ''X-312 Flight to Hell''||''{{Interlanguage link multi|X312 - Flug zur Hölle|lb}}'' · ''Vuelo al Infierno'' · ''Die Grüne Hölle des Amazonas'' / ''The Green Hell of the Amazon'' · ''Infierno, tuya es la victoria'' / ''Hell...You Win'' · ''Amazonas'' (shooting title)|| produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; co-written by Franco and Brauner; starred Howard Vernon, Paul Muller, Esperanza Roy, Siegfried Schurenberg, Jesus Franco (cameo) and Ewa Stromberg; music by Bruno Nicolai; distributed only in Spain, France and Germany |
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| rowspan=7 | 1971 |
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| ''The Death Avenger of Soho'' ||''Der Todesrächer von Soho'' · ''El Muerto Hace las Maletas'' / ''The Corpse Packs his Bags'' · ''The Avenger'' (U.K.) . ''Allarme a Scotland Yard: Sei Omicidi Senza Assassino''|| produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Franco and Brauner, based on a novel by Bryan Edgar Wallace; starred Fred Williams, Horst Tappert, Siegfried Schurenberg and Jesus Franco; distributed only in Spain, Italy and Germany |
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| ''The Vengeance of Dr. Mabuse''||''La Venganza del Dr. Mabuse'' · ''Mabuse '70'' · ''El Dr. Mabuse'' . ''Dr. M schlägt zu'' / ''Dr. M Strikes Back'' · ''The Man Who Called Himself Mabuse'' (shooting title)|| produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; written by Franco and Brauner; starred Fred Williams, Ewa Stromberg, Jack Taylor and Jesus Franco (cameo); music by Daniel White and Franco; distributed only in Spain and Germany |
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| ''Virgin Report''||''Jungfrauen Report'' · ''Le Vierges et l'Amour'' / ''Virgins and Love'' · ''Defloration'' || sex documentary produced by Artur Brauner and Karl Heinz Mannchen; starred Britt Nichols and Howard Vernon; music by Daniel White; Franco's first film with Britt Nichols |
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| ''Three Naked Women on Robinson Island'' ||''Trois Filles Nues dans L'Ile de Robinson'' . ''Robinson und seine Wilden Sklavinnen'' / ''Robinson and his Wild Slaves'' · ''Sexy Darlings'' . ''The Island of Forbidden Pleasures''|| sexy comedy produced by Artur Brauner, Karl Heinz Mannchen and Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and Brauner; starred Anne Libert, Paul Muller and Howard Vernon; music by Daniel White and Bruno Nicolai; this was Franco's first film with both producer Robert de Nesle and actress Anne Libert (who was de Nesle's girlfriend) |
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| ''[[A Virgin Among the Living Dead]]'' (released in 1973) ||''Une Vierge chez les Morts Vivant'' · ''Una Vergine tra gli Zombi'' · ''Christina princesse de l'erotisme'' / ''Christina, Princess of Eroticism'' · ''I desideri erotici di Christine'' / ''The Erotic Dreams of Christine'' · ''A Young Girl Among the Living Dead'' · ''Exorcismo per una Vergine'' · ''La Nuit des Etoiles Filantes'' / ''The Night of the Shooting Stars'' (Franco's preferred shooting title)|| produced by Karl Heinz Mannchen and Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Howard Vernon, Christina Von Blanc, Anne Libert, Jesus Franco, Paul Muller, Luis Barboo, Nicole Guettard (as the nurse), Rosa Palomares and Britt Nichols; music by Bruno Nicolai and Jesus Franco; re-released with added zombie footage (filmed by Jean Rollin) in 1981; several different versions of this film exist, including an X-rated version reportedly featuring added scenes with Alice Arno |
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| ''Blood on the Shoes'' ||''Sangre en los zapatos''|| unfinished; film would reportedly have starred Anne Libert and Howard Vernon |
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| ''Dracula vs. Frankenstein'' ||''Dracula contra Frankenstein'' · ''Dracula, Prisonier de Frankenstein'' / ''Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein'' · ''Die Nacht der Offenen Särge'' / ''The Night of the Open Coffins'' · ''The Screaming Dead'' (U.S. video title)|| produced by Robert de Nesle, written by Franco; starred Howard Vernon, Alberto Dalbes, Anne Libert, Fernando Bilbao, Luis Barboo, Daniel White, Dennis Price and Britt Nichols; music by Daniel White and Bruno Nicolai |
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| rowspan=11 | 1972 |
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| ''Daughter of Dracula''||''La Fille de Dracula'' / ''Da vloek van Dracula'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Anne Libert, Britt Nichols, Alberto Dalbes, Daniel White, Jesus Franco, Fernando Bilbao, Yelena Samarina and Howard Vernon; music by Daniel White and Franco; this film was poorly distributed at the time |
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| ''The Lovers of Devil's Island'' ||''Los Amantes de la Isla del Diablo'' (the tame Spanish version) · ''Violences erotiques dans une prison de femmes'' / ''Erotic Violence in a Women's Prison'' (the more erotic French version) · ''Quartier de femmes'' · ''Devil's Island Lovers''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco and de Nesle; starred Dennis Price, Britt Nichols, Rosa Palomares, Luis Barboo, Anne Libert, Daniel White and Howard Vernon; music by Daniel White and Bruno Nicolai; filmed in Spain, Portugal and the Canary Islands |
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| ''The Curse of Frankenstein'' ||''La Maldicion de Frankenstein'' (Franco's original title) · ''The Erotic Rites of Frankenstein'' (de Nesle's retitled version)· ''Les Exploits Erotiques de Frankenstein'' / ''The Erotic Experiences of Frankenstein'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Howard Vernon, Dennis Price, Alberto Dalbes, Anne Libert, Jesus Franco, Daniel White, Fernando Bilbao, Luis Barboo and Britt Nichols; music by Daniel White; some extra scenes with Lina Romay as a Gypsy were later added (to the Spanish version only) in 1973 |
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| ''The Demons''||''Les Demons'' · ''The She-Demons'' · ''Die Nonnen von Clichy'' / ''The Nuns of Clichy'' · ''Les Demons du Sexe'' / ''The Demons of Sex'' . ''Les Infants du Demon'' / ''Children of the Demon'' · ''Os Demonios'' · ''Les novices perverses''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco, based loosely on the life of Judge George Jeffreys; starred Anne Libert, Alberto Dalbes, Doris Thomas, Howard Vernon, Luis Barboo and Britt Nichols; music by Jean-Bernard Raiteux |
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| ''A Captain of Fifteen Years''||''Un Capitan de Quince Anos'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco and de Nesle's wife Elizabeth, based on a Jules Verne novel; starred William Berger, Howard Vernon, Alberto Dalbes, Edmund Purdom, Doris Thomas, Luis Barboo and Fernando Bilbao; music by Bruno Nicolai and Franco; Franco's first film with William Berger |
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| ''A Silence of the Grave'' ||''Un silencio de tumba''|| produced, written and directed by Franco for his own company Manacoa Films; starred Montserrat Prous, Kali Hansa, Alberto Dalbes, Caroline Reviere (Franco's step-daughter) and Yelena Samarina; this was the first time Franco starred Montserrat Prous in a film |
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| ''Les Ebranlees'' ||''The Vibrating Girls'' (translation) · ''The House of Vice''/ ''La Maison du Vice'' . ''Dolls For Sale'' . ''Des Filles Pour L'Amour'' / ''Women for Love'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and Elizabeth de Nesle; starred Montserrat Prous, Kali Hansa, Howard Vernon, Luis Barboo, Doris Thomas and Anne Libert |
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| ''Intimate Diary of a Nymphomaniac'' ||''Le Journal Intime d'une Nymphomane'' · ''Sinner'' · ''Diary of a Nymphomaniac'' · ''Les Inassouvies '77'' / ''The Insatiables '77''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and Elizabeth de Nesle; starred Montserrat Prous, Anne Libert, Doris Thomas, Yelena Samarina, Caroline Riviere, Kali Hansa, Howard Vernon and Luis Barboo; a French hardcore version also exists |
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| ''Relax, Baby''||''Un Tiro en la Sien'' / ''A Bullet in the Head'' ||unreleased; this film was supposed to be produced and directed by Franco's own company Manacoa Films, and was supposed to star Lina Romay, Kali Hansa, Montserrat Prous and Alberto Dalbes |
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| ''Mystery of the Red Castle'' ||''Misterio del Castillo Rojo'' ||unreleased; this film was supposed to be produced and directed by Franco's own company Manacoa Films, and was supposed to star Jesus Franco, Alberto Dalbes, Yelena Samarina, Lina Romay, Montserrat Prous and Antonio Mayans |
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|- |
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| ''The Sinister Eyes of Dr. Orloff''||''Los ojos siniestros del Dr. Orloff'' . ''Los ojos del Dr. Orloff''|| produced and directed by Franco for his own company Manacoa Films; starred Montserrat Prous, William Berger, Edmund Purdom, Kali Hansa, Yelena Samarina, Lina Romay and Robert Woods; filmed in the Canary Islands; this was Lina Romay's first film appearance for Franco (a very small role as Montserrat Prous's neighbor); this film was a remake of Franco's 1970 film ''Nightmares Come At Night'' |
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| rowspan=13 | 1973 |
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| ''Pleasure For Three'' ||''Plaisir a Trois'' . ''How To Seduce a Virgin'' · ''Les Innasouvies II'' / ''The Insatiables Part 2''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco and Alain Petit, based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; starred Alice Arno, Lina Romay (in her first major role), Howard Vernon and Robert Woods; Franco remade this film in 1979 as ''Erotic Symphony'' |
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| ''The Perverse Countess'' ||''Le Comtesse Perverse'' · ''Un Caldo Corpo di Femina'' / ''The Warm Body of a Woman'' . ''The Countess Zaroff'' . ''Sexy Nature'' . ''Les Croqueuses'' / ''The Munchers'' (X-rated 1974 French version with added porn scenes) || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and Elizabeth de Nesle, inspired by the 1932 film ''[[The Most Dangerous Game (film)|The Most Dangerous Game]]''; starred Alice Arno, Howard Vernon, Lina Romay (playing the lead heroine), Kali Hansa, Robert Woods and Caroline Riviere; the added porn scenes for ''The Munchers'' involved Monica Swinn and Pierre Taylou; the producer hated this film when he found out that it was about cannibalism; Franco later remade this film in 1997 as ''Tender Flesh'' |
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|- |
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| ''Maciste vs. the Amazon Queen'' ||''Maciste Contre la Reine des Amazones'' . ''The Lustful Amazons'' · ''Les Amazones de la Luxure'' · ''Maciste aux Mains des Amazones Nues'' . ''Karzan Contro le Donne dal Seno Nudo'' / ''Karzan vs. the Bare-Breasted Women'' · ''Yuka'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Wal Davis, Montserrat Prous, Kali Hansa, Alice Arno, Robert Woods and Lina Romay |
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| ''The Erotic Exploits of Maciste in Atlantis'' ||''Les Exploits Erotiques de Macist dans L'Atlantide'' . ''Les Gloutonnes'' / ''The Gobblers'' · ''Sexes au Soleil''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Wal Davis, Montserrat Prous, Kali Hansa, Alice Arno, Howard Vernon, Robert Woods, Caroline Riviere, Lina Romay and Pamela Stanford; Franco knocked together this film in his spare time while he was shooting ''Maciste vs. the Amazon Queen'' |
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| ''The Other Side of the Mirror'' ||''Al Otro Lado del Espejo'' · ''Le Miroir Cochon'' · ''Outre-Tombe'' / ''Ultra Tumba'' · ''Lo Specchio del Piacere'' / ''The Mirror of Pleasure'' . ''Inceste'' · ''Le Miroir Obscene'' / ''The Obscene Mirror'' (a re-edited 1975 French version with added porn scenes) || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco and his wife Nicole Guettard; starred Emma Cohen, Howard Vernon, Alice Arno, Robert Woods, Wal Davis; added porn scenes were made which involved Lina Romay and her husband Ramon Ardid (inserted years later into the 1975 sexy French version only) |
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| ''[[Female Vampire|The Bare Breasted Countess]]'' (released in 1975) ||''La Comtesse Aux Seins Nus'' · ''La Comtesse Noire'' / ''The Black Countess'' · ''The Loves of Irina'' · ''Erotikill'' · ''Les Avaleuses'' / ''The Swallowers'' (hardcore French version) ''Entfesselte Begierde'' / ''Unbridled Lust'' (softcore German version) · ''[[Female Vampire]]'' (DVD title)|| produced by Marius Lesouer; written by Jesus Franco; starred Jack Taylor, Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Jesus Franco, Luis Barboo, Alice Arno and Monica Swinn; music by Daniel White; filmed in Portugal |
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| ''Night of the Killers'' || ''La Noche de los Asesinos'' / ''Night of the Assassins'' · ''Night of the Skull'' (DVD title) · ''Sospiri'' · ''Im Schatten des Mörders'' / ''In the Shadow of Murder'' || written by Jesus Franco, based on the play ''[[The Cat and the Canary (play)|The Cat and the Canary]]'', but credits strangely refer to the film as an Edgar Allan Poe adaptation (!); starred Alberto Dalbes, William Berger, Lina Romay (and her husband Ramon Ardid), Yelena Samarina, Luis Barboo and Antonio Mayans; music by Carlo Savina |
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| ''La Casa del Ahorcado''||''The House of the Hanged Man'' . ''Le Manoir du Pendu''||unfinished; this film was supposed to be produced and directed by Franco for his own company Manacoa Films, and was supposed to star Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Alberto Dalbes |
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| ''Linda's Hot Nights'' ||''Les Nuits Brulantes de Linda'' · ''La Felicita nel Peccato'' / ''The Felicity of Sin'' · ''Le Plaisir Solitaire'' / ''Solitary Pleasure'' · ''Mais Que Donc a Viole Linda?'' / ''Who Raped Linda?''|| produced by Marius and Daniel Lesouer; starred Lina Romay, Alice Arno, Paul Muller and Monica Swinn; music by Daniel White; Franco remade this film in 1977 as ''Sexy Sisters'' |
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|- |
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| ''Tender and Perverse Emanuelle''||'' Tender et Perverse Emmanuelle'' . ''Des Frissons sur la Peau'' / ''Shivers of the Flesh'' · ''Le Chemin Solitaire'' / ''The Solitary Path'' · ''El Ultimo Escalofrio'' / ''The Last Thrill'' . ''Dernier Frisson''|| produced by Marius Lesouer; written by Jesus Franco; starred Alberto Dalbes, Jack Taylor, Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Alice Arno and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
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| ''Kiss Me, Killer'' ||''Sexy Blues'' · ''Tango au Clair de Lune'' / ''Tango by Moonlight'' · ''Emanuelle Blonde'' . ''Come With Me My Blonde Emmanuelle'' . ''Embrasse-Moi'' . ''Dolce Porno Baby'' || produced by Marius Lesouer; written by Jesus Franco; features Lina Romay's "Rape of Apollo" dance number; starred Alberto Dalbes, Alice Arno, Lina Romay, Paul Muller, Antonio Mayans and Olivier Mathot; music by Daniel White; this film was a remake of Franco's 1962 film ''Death Whistles the Blues'' |
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| ''Lascivia''||''Lasvive'' || a project that was never completed |
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| ''The Mark of Zorro''||''La marque de Zorro'' || Franco helped Alain Payet and Marius Lesoeur direct this film, uncredited; starred Howard Vernon, Monica Swinn; released in 1975 |
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| rowspan=7 | 1974 |
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| ''Exorcisme'' ||''Exorcisme et Messes Noires'' / ''Exorcism and Black Masses'' · ''Le Viziose'' · ''Sexorcismes'' (a 1975 X-rated version with added sex scenes) || produced by Marius & Daniel Lesouer; starred Jesus Franco (in a major role), Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Caroline Riviere, Nadine Pascal, Daniel White, Olivier Mathot and Monica Swinn; music by Andre Benichou; footage from this film was later re-edited into Franco's 1979 ''The Sadist of Notre Dame'' |
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| ''Celestine, Maid at Your Service'' ||''Celestine, Bonne a Tout Faire'' / ''Celestine, Good for Anything'' . ''Celestine, An All-Around Maid''|| sex comedy set in 17th century France, produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco and Nicole Guettard; starred Lina Romay, Howard Vernon, Pamela Stanford, Ramon Ardid, Olivier Mathot and Monica Swinn; Franco later remade this film in 1984 as ''Scarlet'' |
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| ''Lorna, the Exorcist'' ||''Lorna, l'Exorciste'' . ''Les Possedees du Diable'' / ''The Devil's Possessed'' · ''Sexy Diabolic Story''|| Franco's take on ''[[The Exorcist]]''; produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco, de Nesle and Nicole Guettard; starred Lina Romay, Pamela Stanford, Jesus Franco and Howard Vernon; Franco later remade this film in 2002 as ''Jess Franco's Incubus'' |
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| ''Les Chatouilleuses'' ||''The Ticklish Ones'' (translation) . ''Les Nonnes en Folie''/ ''Nuns in Madness'' · ''Le sexy goditrici'' / ''God's Sexy Women'' (a later X-rated edit) || produced by Robert de Nesle; co-written by Franco, Nicole Guettard and Alain Petit; starred Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot, Ramon Ardid, Caroline Riviere, Pamela Stanford, Monica Swinn and Fred Williams; music by Daniel White; shot in Portugal |
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| ''The Sexiest Man in the World''||''Roland, L'Homme le Plus Sexy du Monde'' . 'Le Jouisseur'' / ''The Hedonist'' · ''Sexy Erotic Job'' · ''Der Sex Playboy'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Nicole Guettard (Franco's then-wife); starred Fred Williams, Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot, Ramon Ardid, Caroline Riviere, Pamela Stanford and Monica Swinn; shot in Portugal & France |
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| ''Les Emmerdeuses''||''The Troublemakers'' (translation) · ''Les Grandes Emmerdeuses'' / ''The Big Pains in the Ass'' · ''Sexy-a-Go-Go'' || produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Jesus Franco; starred Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Pamela Stanford, Monica Swinn and Fred Williams |
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| ''Convoy of Women'' || ''East of Berlin'' . ''Convoy of Girls'' . ''SS Nazi Convoy'' || produced by Marius Lesoeur; released in France in 1974; released in Italy in 1978; Franco apparently co-directed this film (uncredited) with Pierre Chevalier, although some sources dispute it; starred Monica Swinn and Pamela Stanford; music by Daniel White |
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| rowspan=11 | 1975 |
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| ''De Sade's Juliette''||''Justine Lady Lujuria'' · ''Julietta 69'' · ''Justine'' (a variant Italian hardcore version released in 1979 edited by [[Joe D'Amato]]) || written by Franco, based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; starred Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Alain Petit, Monica Swinn and Jesus Franco |
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| ''Midnight Party'' ||''Le Partouze de Minuit'' · ''Heisse Berührungen'' · ''Lady Porno'' · ''La Coccolona'' · ''Sexy Blues'' · ''Porno Pop'' · ''Porno Dama''|| produced by Marius and Daniel Lesouer; starred Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot, Jesus Franco, Alain Petit, Ramon Ardid and Monica Swinn; music by Daniel White; several different versions of this film exist |
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| ''Shining Sex'' ||''Le Sexe Brillant'' · ''La Fille au Sexe Brillant'' / ''The Girl With the Shining Sex'' · ''Erotic Pleasures of a Good Lady'' || very slow-paced sci-fi/porn film produced by Marius and Daniel Lesouer; written by Franco and Pierre-Claude Garnier; starred Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot, Ramon Ardid, Alain Petit, Jesus Franco and Monica Swinn; music by Daniel White |
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| ''Women in a Golden Cage'' ||''Des Filles dans une Cage Doree'' . ''Razzia Sur le Plaisir'' · ''Vizio in Bocca'' . ''Carcel Dorada'' || produced and written by Marius Lesoeur, based on a novel called ''Greetings from Hong Kong''; co-directed by Lesoeur and Franco (Franco directed only a few striptease scenes just to pad out the film); starred Monica Swinn, Alice Arno, Jesus Franco and Daniel White; music by Daniel White; incredibly low budget with lots of meaningless stock footage |
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| ''Mandinga'' || ''Mandinga'' ||unfinished; film was supposed to star William Berger |
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| ''A Virgin for St. Tropez''||''Une vierge pour Saint-Tropez''||Franco helped Georges Friendland direct this film, uncredited |
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| ''[[Barbed Wire Dolls]]''||''Frauengefängnis'' / ''Women's Prison'' · ''Caged Women'' ''Penitenziario Femminile per Reali Sessuali''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Jesus Franco; starred Lina Romay, Monica Swinn, Martine Stedil, Ramon Ardid, Jesus Franco and Paul Muller; music by Daniel White; Franco's first film for producer Erwin Dietrich; some footage from this film later wound up in a Eurocine movie called ''Femmes de SS'' |
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| ''Women Behind Bars'' ||''Diamants Pour L'Enfer'' / ''Diamonds for Hell'' · ''Visa Pour Mourir'' / ''Visa To Die'' · ''Prison Sado Pour Femmes'' / ''Sadistic Women's Prison'' . ''Punition Cell'' || distributed by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Lina Romay, Martine Stedil, Ramon Ardid and Jesus Franco; music by Daniel White; Erwin Dietrich claimed Franco shot this film on his dime, while Franco was supposed to be filming ''Barbed Wire Dolls'' for him |
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| ''The Man From Guyane''||''L'Homme de la Guyane''||unfinished; this film was to have been based on "Cheri Bibi" by Gaston Leroux and was supposed to have starred Orson Welles, Klaus Kinski and Howard Vernon, but it never got completed because Erwin Dietrich could not get the financing for it |
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| ''Downtown: The Naked Dolls of the Underworld''||''{{Interlanguage link multi|Downtown – Die nackten Puppen der Unterwelt|de}}'' · ''Les putains de la ville basse'' / ''The Whores of the Underworld'' · ''Levres Rouge et Bottes Noires'' · ''Schwarze Nylons, Wilde Engel''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Franco; starred Jess Franco (in a major role), Lina Romay, Monica Swinn, Martine Stedil, Ramon Ardid and Paul Muller; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| ''The Slaves'' ||''Die Sklavinnen'' . ''Die Verschleppten'' / ''The Neglected Ones'' . ''Les Flagellees de la Cellule 69''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Franco and Dietrich; starred Lina Romay, Esther Moser, Ramon Ardid, Jesus Franco and Martine Stedil; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| rowspan=7 | 1976 |
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| ''The Portrait of Doriana Gray''|| ''Das Bildnis der Doriana Gray'' · ''Die Marquise de Sade'' · ''Dirty Dracula'' . ''Ejaculations'' . ''La Porno Storia della Marchesa De Sade''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Jesus Franco; starred Lina Romay (in a dual role), Ramon Ardid, Martine Stedil and Monica Swinn; music by Walter Baumgartner; both a hardcore porn and a softcore porn version exist |
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| ''Girls of the Night Shift''||''Mädchen im Nachtverkehr'' · ''Wilde Lust'' / ''Wild Lust'' (the hardcore X-rated version) · ''Heisser Sex im Nachtverkehr'' (the shorter softcore version) || produced by Erwin Dietrich; starred Kali Hansa and Esther Moser; music by Walter Baumgartner; both a hardcore porn and a softcore porn version exist |
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| ''White Skin, Black Thigh''||''Weisse Haut auf Schwarzen Schenkeln'' || produced and directed by Erwin Dietrich; starred Kali Hansa, Esther Moser and Jesus Franco; both a hardcore porn and a softcore porn version exist; Franco acted in this film but did not direct it |
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| ''[[Jack the Ripper (1976 film)|Jack the Ripper]]''||''Jack l'Eventreur'' . ''Erotico Profondo'' · ''Jack the Ripper, der Dirnenmörder von London'' || gruesome horror film produced by Erwin Dietrich and Max Dora; written by Franco and Nicolas Weisse; starred Klaus Kinski, Lina Romay, Josephine Chaplin, Esther Studer and Herbert Fux; music by Walter Baumgartner; photographed by Peter Baumgartner |
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| ''Around the World in 80 Beds''||''In 80 Betten um die Welt'' . ''Mondo Erotico'' (DVD release title)|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; Franco allegedly co-directed this film; starred Esther Moser and Esther Studer |
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| ''Greta the Mad Butcher'' ||''Greta Haus Ohne Männer'' / ''Greta, House Without Men'' · ''Ilsa: Absolute Power'' · ''[[Ilsa, the Wicked Warden|Ilsa the Wicked Warden]]'' · ''Greta la Tortionnaire de Wrede'' / ''Greta the Torturer'' · ''Wanda the Wicked Warden'' . ''Greta la Donna Bestia''|| brutal prison film produced by Erwin Dietrich and Max Dora; written by Franco and Dietrich; starred Dyanne Thorne, Tania Busselier, Lina Romay, Esther Studer, Esther Moser and Jesus Franco; music by Walter Baumgartner; released in both a censored and an uncensored version |
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| ''[[Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun]]''||''Die Liebesbriefe einer Portugesischen Nonne'' · ''Forbidden Confessions of an Adolescent Nun'' . ''Cartas de Amor a Una Monja Portuguesa''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich and Max Dora; co-written by Franco and Dietrich, based on the novel of the same name; starred Susan Hemingway, William Berger, Herbert Fux (as Satan) and Esther Studer; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| rowspan=6 | 1977 |
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| ''Blue Rita'' || ''Das Frauenhaus'' / ''The Women's House'' · ''Blue Rita'' (the hardcore X-rated version)|| produced by Erwin Dietrich and Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and Robert de Nesle; starred Pamela Stanford, Esther Moser and Olivier Mathot; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| ''Sexy Sisters'' ||''{{Interlanguage link multi|Die teuflischen Schwestern|fr|3=Deux sœurs vicieuses|lt=Die teuflischen Schwestern}}'' / ''The Devilish Sisters'' · ''Satanic Sisters'' · ''Two Vicious Sisters'' · ''Swedish Nympho Slaves'' · ''Aberraciones Sexuales de una Rubia Caliente'' / ''Sexual Aberrations of a Hot Blonde'' · ''Erotic Frenzy of a Nymphomaniac''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Jesus Franco; starred Pamela Stanford, Jack Taylor (doing nude scenes!) and Karine Gambier; music by Walter Baumgartner (who also acted in the film) |
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| ''Love Camp''||''Camp d'Amour'' · ''Frauen im Liebeslager'' / ''Women in the Love Camp'' · ''Camp Erotique'' . ''Die Unersattliche''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; co-written by Franco and Dietrich; starred Vicky Adams, Ada Tauler, Monica Swinn and Esther Studer; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| ''The Call of the Blonde Goddess'' ||''Ruf der Blonden Göttin'' · ''Las Diosas del Porno'' / ''The Goddesses of Porn'' · ''La Deesse Nue'' / ''The Naked Goddess'' · ''Porno Shock'' . ''Love Cry of the Blonde Goddess'' . ''Voodoo Passion''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; co-written by Franco and Dietrich; starred Vicky Adams, Pamela Stanford, Karine Gambier and Jack Taylor; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| ''Women Without Innocence'' ||''Frauen ohne Unschuld'' · ''Wicked Women'' · ''The Insatiable Nights of a Nymphomaniac'' · ''Femmes Sans Pudeur'' / ''Women Without Modesty'' || produced and written by Erwin Dietrich, based on the novel ''Das Haus der Mannstollen Frauen''; starred Lina Romay, Vicky Adams, Esther Studer and Monica Swinn; music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| ''[[Women in Cellblock 9]]''||''Frauen für Zellenblock 9'' · ''Esclaves de l'Amour'' / ''Love Slaves'' · ''Flucht von der Todesinsel''|| produced by Erwin Dietrich; written by Jesus Franco; starred Karine Gambier, Susan Hemingway, Esther Studer and Howard Vernon: music by Walter Baumgartner |
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| rowspan=4 | 1978 |
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| ''Cocktail Special''|| || produced and written by Robert de Nesle, based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; starred Touxa Beni, Karine Gambier and Lina Romay; music by Daniel White |
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| ''Elles Font Tout'' ||''They Do It All'' (translation) . ''They Do Everything'' · ''Quel Certo Piacere''|| produced by Robert de Nesle; written by Franco and de Nesle; this sexy comedy starred Susan Hemingway, Touxa Beni and Lina Romay (a.k.a. Candy Coster); music by Daniel White; Franco later remade this film in 1982 as ''El hotel de los ligues'' |
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| ''I'm Burning Up All Over''||''Je Brule de Partout'' · ''Dossier Mineures'' || produced and co-written by Robert de Nesle; starred Brigitte Lahaie and Susan Hemingway; music by Daniel White; Lahaie later had very bad things to say about her experience working with Franco on this film, but she later reconciled with him |
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| ''Two Female Spies with Flowered Panties'' || ''Deux Espionnes Avec un Petit Slip a Fleur'' . ''Opalo de Fuego: Mercarderes del Sexo'' / ''Opal of Fire: The Sex Merchants'' . ''Lascivia'' (working title)|| produced by Marius Lesoeur; written by Jesus Franco; Nicole Guettard was assistant director on this film; starred Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot, Vicky Adams and Nadine Pascal; music by Daniel White; two versions of this film exist |
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| rowspan=4 | 1979 |
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| ''The Girls of Copacabana''||''Las Chicas de Copacabana'' · ''Las Muchachas de Copacabana'' || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesouer; written by Marius Lesoeur; starred Lina Romay, Nadine Pascal and Olivier Mathot; music by Daniel White; shot on 16mm film for unknown reasons |
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| ''Erotic Symphony''||''Sinfonia Erotica'' · ''Cuerpos y Almas'' / ''Bodies and Souls'' || written by Franco, based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; starred Lina Romay and Susan Hemingway; music by Jesus Franco; this film was a remake of Franco's 1973 film ''Pleasure for Three'' |
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| ''The Sadist of Notre Dame'' ||''El Sadico de Notre Dame'' · ''Le Sadique de Notre Dame'' . ''The Ripper of Notre Dame'' · ''Chains and Black Leather'' (Canadian release title) . ''Demoniac'' (censored U.S. video release) || Franco re-used a lot of footage from his earlier film ''Exorcisme'' to make this film; produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; written by Franco and Marius Lesoeur; starred Jess Franco, Lina Romay, Nadine Pascale, Ramon Ardid, Daniel White, Olivier Mathot and Monica Swinn; music by Daniel White |
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| ''The Gold Bug''||''El escarabajo de oro'' . ''Vaya Luna de Miel''||never released theatrically; based on the short story of the same name by Edgar Allan Poe, this film was supposed to have starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans |
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| rowspan=12 | 1980 |
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| ''[[Mondo Cannibale]]'' ||''Cannibal World'' (translation) · ''Les Cannibales'' / ''The Cannibals'' · ''La Dea Cannibale'' / ''The Cannibal Goddess'' · ''White Cannibal Queen'' · ''Die Blonde Gottin'' / ''The Blonde Goddess'' · ''Barbarian Goddess'' · ''Une Fille Pour Les Cannibales'' / ''A Woman for the Cannibals'' · ''Rio Salvaje'' (working title) || produced by Daniel Lesoeur; written by Franco; starred Al Cliver, Sabrina Siani, Lina Romay, Ramon Ardid, Pamela Stanford, Anouchka (the producer's daughter), Antonio Mayans and Olivier Mathot; Franco later said that Sabrina Siani was the worst actress that he had ever worked with |
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| ''[[Cannibal Terror]]''||''Terreur Cannibal'' ||produced by Daniel Lesoeur; Franco wrote this screenplay, but the film was directed by Olivier Mathot and Alain Deruille; starred Antonio Mayans, Sabrina Siani, Olivier Mathot and Pamela Stanford; incorporated footage from Franco's ''Mondo Cannibale'' (1980) |
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| ''Sex Is Crazy''||''El Sexo Esta Loco'' || produced by Joaquin Dominguez; written by Franco; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Jesus Franco; music by Daniel White |
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| ''Sexual Aberrations of a Married Woman''||''Aberraciones Sexuales de una Mujer Casada'' . ''Diary of a Desperate Housewife'' . ''Sexual Aberrations of a Housewife'' . ''Cecilia'' (1983 French release version)|| co-produced by Marius Lesoeur and Jesus Franco; Olivier Mathot and Pierre Chevalier shot some extra scenes for the 1983 French release version called ''Cecilia''; starred Vicky Adams, Lina Romay, Olivier Mathot and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
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| ''Eugenie: The Story of a Perversion'' ||''Eugenie Historia de una Perversion'' · ''The Wicked Memoirs of Eugenie'' . ''Erotismo'' . ''Lolita am Scheideweg'' || produced by Julian Esteban; written by Franco, based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; edited by Nicole Guettard; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Mabel Escano and Katja Bienert; music by Daniel White and Franco |
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| ''[[Devil Hunter (film)|Devil Hunter]]'' ||''Chasseurs d'Hommes'' (translation) · ''Man Hunter'' . ''Sexo Cannibal'' · ''Jungfrau unter Kannibalen'' / ''The Young Woman and the Cannibals'' · ''Mandingo Manhunter'' (U.S. video title)|| co-produced by Julian Gomez and Daniel Lesoeur; co-written by Franco and Julian Gomez; co-directed by Lina Romay and Franco; edited by Nicole Guettard; art director was Pierre Chevalier; starred Al Cliver, Vicky Adams, Ursula Buchfellner, Werner Pochath and Antonio Mayans; music by Franco and Daniel White |
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| ''[[Zombie Lake]]''||''El lago de los muertos vivientes'' / ''The Lake of the Living Dead'' . ''Le lac des morts-vivant''||produced by Daniel Lesoeur; Franco wrote this screenplay, then left the project, so Jean Rollin was hired to direct; starred Howard Vernon, Antonio Mayans, Anouchka Leseour (the producer's daughter), Nadine Pascal and Jean Rollin; Rollin later said that he thought this film was awful; he just did it as a favor for Lesouer |
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| ''[[Sadomania]]''||''Sadomania: El Infierno de la Pasion'' ''Sadomania, Hölle der Lust'' · ''Hellhole Women'' · ''Prisoners of the Flesh'' . ''Sadomania: The Hell of Passion''|| prison film co-produced by Antonio Mayans and Julio Poura; written by Franco and Gunter Ebert; co-directed by Lina Romay and Franco; starred Ajita Wilson (a real-life transsexual), Antonio Mayans, Ursula Buchfellner, Nadine Pascal and Jesus Franco |
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| ''[[Bloody Moon]]'' ||''Lune de Sang'' · ''Die Säge des Todes'' / ''The Saw of Death'' · ''Profonde Tenebre'' / ''Deep Darkness'' · ''Colegiadas Violadas'' / ''Raped College Girls'' ||slasher film produced by Wolf Hartwig and Erich Tomek; co-directed by Lina Romay and Franco; music by Gerhard Heinz |
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| ''The Naked Superwitches of the Rio Amore'' || ''Die Nackten Superhexen vom Rio Amore'' . ''Die Frauen vom Rio Amore'' . ''Orgia de Ninfomanas'' . ''Captive Women'' (video title) . ''The Story of Linda'' (U.K. title)|| produced by Erich Tomek and Antonio Mayans; co-directed by Franco and Lina Romay; stars Antonio Mayans, Ursula Buchfellner and Katja Bienert; music by Gerhard Heinz |
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| ''The Girl in the Transparent Panties'' ||''La Chica de las Bragas Transparentes'' . ''Pick-up Girls''|| produced by Antonio Mayans; written by Franco, based on a Perry Mason novel; starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White and Franco |
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| ''Adolescence'' ||''Adolescencia''|| a project that was never completed |
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|- |
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| rowspan=5 | 1981 |
|||
| ''Lake of the Virgins''||''El Lago de los Virgenes'' · ''Island of the Virgins'' || based on a story by Robert Louis Stevenson; starred Katja Bienert; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Night of the Open Sexes''|| ''La noche de los sexos abiertos'' / ''Night of the Open Vaginas'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Kalt wie Eis''|| ''Strike Back''|| Franco helped Carl Schenkel direct this film, uncredited |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Macumba Sexual''||''Sexual Voodoo'' || starred Ajita Wilson, Antonio Mayans and Lina Romay; music by Daniel White; this film was a remake of Franco's 1970 film ''Vampyros Lesbos'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Oasis of the Zombies]]''||''L'Abime des Morts Vivants'' / ''The Abyss of the Living Dead'' · ''Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies'' (video release title) · ''Le Tresor des Morts Vivants'' / ''Treasure of the Living Dead'' || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Eric Viellard and Jeff Montgomery; Franco played a zombie in the film; music by Daniel White; a Spanish version with Lina Romay was made simultaneously under the title ''La Tumba de los Muertos Vivientes'', but it was only shown in Spain and now appears to be a lost film |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=9 | 1982 |
|||
| ''Intimate Confessions of an Exhibitionist''|| ''Confesiones íntimas de una exhibicionista'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Black Boots, Leather Whip''||''Botas Negras, Latigo de Cuero'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Sinister Dr. Orloff'' ||''El Siniestro Dr. Orloff'' · ''Experimentos Macabros'' / ''Macabre Experiments'' || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Howard Vernon and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The House of the Lost Women''||''La Casa de las Mujeres Perdidas'' · ''Perversion en la Isla Perdida'' / ''Perversion on the Lost Island'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Inconfessable Orgies of Emanuelle''||''Emanuelle Exposed'' · ''Emanuelle's Secret Orgies'' || starred Vicky Adams and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''El hotel de los ligues''|| ''The Hotel of Rendezvous'' (translation) . ''The Hotel of Love Affairs'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White; this film was a remake of Franco's ''Elles Font Tout'' (1978) |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[Mansion of the Living Dead]]''|| ''La Mansion de los Muertos Vivientes'' || Franco's homage to Amando de Ossorio's ''Blind Dead'' series; starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Shadow of Judoka vs. Dr. Wong''||''La Sombra del Judoka contra el Dr. Wong'' || starred Lina Romay and Jesus Franco; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Moans of Pleasure''||''Gemidos de Placer'' || a remake of Franco's ''Pleasure For Three'' (1973), based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=16 | 1983 |
|||
| ''The Blues of Pop Street''||''Los Blues de la Calle Pop'' · ''Las Aventuras de Felipe Marlboro Volumen Ocho / The Adventures of Phillip Marlboro, Volume 8'' . ''The Pop Street Blues''|| produced, written and directed by Franco; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Analia Ivars |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Fury in the Tropics'' ||''Furia en el Tropico'' · ''Orgasmo Perverso'' (re-edited hardcore version) · ''Mujeres Acorraladas'' / ''Cornered Women'' · ''Fury in Jamaica'' || starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Analia Ivars; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Revenge in the House of Usher'' ||''El Hundimiento de la Casa Usher'' / ''The Fall of the House of Usher'' (Franco's original 1982 cut, shown only at a film festival in Spain) · ''Los Crimenes de Usher'' / ''The Crimes of Usher'' (Franco's 1984 re-edit adding 3 murder sequences by Howard Vernon, available only as a low-quality bootleg) · ''Nevrosis: Die Rache des Hauses Usher'' / ''Nevrosis: Revenge in the House of Usher'' (Franco's 1988 final version which was the version released on VHS)|| based on the short story "The Fall of the House of Usher" by Edgar Allan Poe; the 1988 re-edit produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur incorporated footage from Franco's 1961 ''The Awful Dr. Orloff''; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Daniel White and Howard Vernon; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Treasure of the White Goddess'' || ''El Tesoro de la Diosa Blanca'' . ''Diamonds of Kilimandjaro'' (DVD release title) || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Katja Bienert, Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Daniel White and Olivier Mathot; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Lillian the Perverted Virgin''||''Lilian la Virgen Pervertida'' || starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Daniel White and Katja Bienert; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Night Has a Thousand Sexes''||''Mil Sexos Tiene La Noche'' || starred Lina Romay; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Sexual Story of O''||''La Historia Sexual de O'' . ''Lola 2000'' . ''Une petite femme pour hotel particulier'' || starred Alicia Principe and Carmen Carrion; Lina Romay was on the poster, but was not in the film; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Barrio Chino''||''Barrio Porno''||unreleased; was supposed to star Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''In Search of the Golden Dragon''||''En Busca del Dragon Dorado'' || based on "The Gold Bug" by Edgar Allan Poe; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Golden Temple Amazons''||''Les Amazones du Temple d'Or'' · ''Tundra and the Temple of the Sun'' (Franco's original working title) || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; Franco started this film as ''Tundra and the Temple of the Sun'' in 1984 but never completed it, so Alain Petit finished it for him and released it in 1990 as ''Golden Temple Amazons''; starred William Berger, Analia Ivars, Olivier Mathot and Antonio Mayans<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press.</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Scarlet'' ||''The Grandfather, the Countess and Mischievous Scarlet'' · ''Escarlate la Traviesa'' / ''Naughty Scarlet'' || remake of Franco's ''Celestine'' (1974), this film was apparently never released; starred Lina Romay, Vicky Adams, Analia Ivars and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Camino Solitario'' ||''Lonely Road'' (translation) || starred Lina Romay (in a dual role), Antonio Mayans and Jesus Franco; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Tanga Girls''||''Las Chicas del Tanga'' || starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Vicky Adams and Analia Ivars; supposedly directed by Lina Romay |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Alone Against Terror''||''Sola Ante el Terror'' · ''Los Monstruos de Fiske Manor'' / ''The Monsters of Fiske Manor'' || starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Mabel Escano; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Blood On My Shoes''||''Sangre en mis Zapatos'' || based on an Edgar Wallace novel; starred Lina Romay, Howard Vernon and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''A Buttcrack for Two''||''Una Rajita Para Dos'' / ''A Crack For Two'' || Lina Romay's first solo directing job; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Jesus Franco |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=6 | 1984 |
|||
| ''How Much Does a Spy Cost?''||''Cuanto Cobra un Espia?'' || produced and directed by Franco; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Luis Barboo and Analia Ivars |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Dirty Game in Casablanca''||''Juego Sucio en Casablanca'' || produced and directed by Franco; starred William Berger, Analia Ivars, Vicky Adams, Luis Barboo and Antonio Mayans |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Killer Wore Black Socks''||''El asesino llevaba medias negras''||unfinished; would have starred William Berger, Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans and Mabel Escano |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Girl with the Red Lips''||''La Chica de los Labios Rojos'' || produced by Gabriel Martin; starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Jesus Franco and Mabel Escano |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''White Bay''||''Bahia Blanca''|| produced and directed by Franco; co-edited by Lina Romay; starred Lina Romay, Analia Ivars, Jesus Franco and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Voices of Death''||''Voces de Muerte'' . ''Finestrat''||unfinished; based on an Edgar Wallace novel; produced and directed by Franco; this film would have starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=10 | 1985 |
|||
| ''Last of the Filipinas''||''Las Ultimas de Filipinas'' || co-produced by Franco and Santigo Moncada; starred Lina Romay (who also co-directed) |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Bangkok: Appointment with Death''||''Bangkok, cita con la muerte'' || co-edited by Lina Romay; starred Lina Romay, Eduardo Fajardo and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Travel to Bangkok, Coffin Included''||''Viaje a Bangkok Ataud Incluido'' || based on an Edgar Wallace character; produced, written, directed and scored by Franco; co-edited by Lina Romay; starred Howard Vernon |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Commando Mengele''||''Angel of Death'' . ''El Hombre que Mato a Mengele'' . ''Gentes del Rio''||Franco co-wrote this film, but did not get to direct it; produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Chris Mitchum, Fernando Rey, Howard Vernon, Jack Taylor and Antonio Mayans |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''La Esclava Bianca''||''White Slave'' || filmed but never released theatrically; co-produced by Franco (who directed the film) and Santiago Moncada (who wrote it); starred Lina Romay and Mabel Escano; music by Daniel White; (this film should not be confused with the 1985 Italian movie ''White Slave'' directed by Mario Gariazzo) |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The White Rhino''||''El rinoceronte blanco'' . ''Revenge of the White Rhino''||unfinished; would have starred Lina Romay, Antonio Mayans, Daniel Katz and Mabel Escano |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Lulu's Talking Ass''||''El Ojete de Lulu'' / ''Lulu's Buttonhole'' · ''Lulu's Bunghole'' || starred Lina Romay and Mabel Escano; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Lulu's Pacifier''||''El Chupete de Lulu'' / ''Lulu's Suck Toy'' || starred Lina Romay and Mabel Escano; music by Jess Franco |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''A Penis for Three''||''Un Pito Para Tres'' / ''A Whistle For Three'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; Lina Romay co-directed, and helped write, this film |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Entre pitos anda el juego'' ||''The Play Moves Between Penises'' . ''The Game Walks Between Whistles'' (literal translation) || starred Lina Romay and Mabel Escano; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=8 | 1986 |
|||
| ''The Watcher and the Exhibitionist''||''El Miron y la Exhibicionista'' / ''The Voyeur and the Exhibitionist'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White; Lina Romay co-directed and helped write this film |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''The Suckers'' ||''Las Chuponas'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White; Lina Romay co-directed & helped write this film |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''For The Babies, Warm Cream''||''Para Las Nenas Leche Calentita'' || starred Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White; Lina Romay co-directed & helped write this film |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Slaves of Crime''||''Esclavas del Crimen'' || produced by Herminio Calvo; starred Lina Romay as the daughter of Fu Manchu; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Teleporno''||||unfinished; this hardcore film starred Lina Romay, Jesus Franco and Mabel Escano |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Bragueta Story'' || ''Zipper Story'' ||unreleased; Lina Romay directed this film direct-to-video; starred Lina Romay and Mabel Escano |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Tribulations of a Cross-Eyed Buddha'' ||''Tribulaciones de un Buda Bizco''||children's film, completed but never released; starred Lina Romay, Howard Vernon and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''AIDS: The 20th Century Plague'' ||''Sida, la Peste del Siglo XX'' . ''Operation Sida''||completed but said to be lost; produced by Emilio Larraga; starred Lina Romay; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=4 | 1987 |
|||
| ''Phollastia''||''Fellations Sauvages'' / ''Wild Fellatio'' || starred Lina Romay; music by Daniel White; Lina Romay co-directed and helped write this extremely X-rated parody of ''[[Dynasty (1981 TV series)|Dynasty]]'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Falo Crest''||''Caprices Sados Pour Salopes du Plaisir'' / ''Sadistic Whims for Whores of Pleasure'' · ''Phallo Crest'' || starred Lina Romay; music by Daniel White; Lina Romay co-directed and helped write this extremely X-rated parody of ''[[Falcon Crest]]'' |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Biba La Banda''|||| Franco produced this comedy film, but did not direct it; directed by Ricardo Palacios; starred Alfredo Landa |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Dark Mission'' ||''Fleurs du Mal'' / ''Flowers of Evil'' · ''The Columbian Connection'' · ''Operacion Cocaina'' . ''The Heroin Deal'' || spy drama produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Christopher Lee, Chris Mitchum, Richard Harrison, Antonio Mayans and Brigitte Lahaie; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1988 |
|||
| ''[[Faceless (film)|Faceless]]''|| ''Les Predateurs de la Nuit'' / ''Predators of the Night'' . ''I Predatori della Notte''|| homage to Franco's ''The Awful Dr. Orloff'' (1961), with a nod to George Franju's ''[[Eyes Without a Face]]''; produced by Rene Chateau; starred Telly Savalas, Helmut Berger, Caroline Munro, Chris Mitchum, Anton Diffring, Brigitte Lahaie (the producer's girlfriend), Howard Vernon and Lina Romay; music by Romano Musumarra |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1989 |
|||
| ''Emerald Bay''||''La Bahia Esmeralda'' . ''Esmeralda Bay'' || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Robert Forster, Brett Halsey, George Kennedy, Fernando Rey, Craig Hill, Antonio Mayans, Jesus Franco and Lina Romay; music by Luis Bacalav; received poor distribution |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=3 | 1990 |
|||
| ''The Fall of Eagles'' ||''La Chute des Aigles'' · ''Un Cancion Para Berlin'' / ''A Song for Berlin'' · ''War Song'' || produced by Marius and Daniel Lesoeur; starred Christopher Lee, Mark Hamill, Craig Hill and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Downtown Heat'' ||''Ciudad Baja'' · ''Vipers'' . ''La punta de las viboras'' / ''Viper's Point'' || starred Mike Connors, Craig Hill, Josephine Chaplin, Lina Romay and Antonio Mayans; music by Daniel White; released in 1994; failed to get wide distribution |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''In Pursuit of Barbara'' || ''À la Poursuite de Barbara'' || Franco co-directed this French film with Jean Rollin, although some sources dispute it; starred Francoise Blanchard, Jean Rollin, Antonio Mayans and Olivier Mathot |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=1 | 1992 |
|||
| ''Don Quijote'' |||| in 1992, Franco completed this film started by Orson Welles back in 1957 as a projected TV series; adapted from Cervantes' novel by Orson Welles; starred Orson Welles, Akim Tamiroff and Francisco Reiguera as Don Quijote; it was finally theatrically released in 1995 to disappointing reviews |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1993 |
|||
| ''Jungle of Fear''||''La Jungla del Miedo'' . ''The Golden Beetle''||unfinished; based on the short story "The Gold Bug" by Edgar Allan Poe; co-produced by Franco; was to have starred Lina Romay, Chris Mitchum, Howard Vernon and William Berger; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1996 |
|||
| ''[[The Killer Barbies#Films|Killer Barbys]]''||''Vampire Killer Barbys'' · ''Killer Barbies'' || Franco's last big-budget film, which managed to stir up a large amount of fan interest in his work; starred Maria Angela Giordano, Silvia Superstar and Aldo Sambrell; shot on film |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1997 |
|||
| ''Tender Flesh''||''Carne Fresca'' . ''Bocatto di Cardinale'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Amber Newman, Analia Ivars, Alain Petit, Monique Parent and Aldo Sambrell; remake of Franco's ''The Perverse Countess'' (1973); this was Franco's last "real" movie (i.e., shot on film) |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=4| 1998 |
|||
| ''Mari-Cookie and the Killer Tarantula''||''Mari Cookie y la tarantula asesina'' . ''Eight Legs To Love You'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Michelle Bauer, Linnea Quigley, Amber Newman, Rachel Sheppard and Analia Ivars; from this point on, Franco's films were all shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Lust for Frankenstein''|| || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Michelle Bauer, Amber Newman, Rachel Sheppard and Analia Ivars; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Dr. Wong's Virtual Hell''||''El infierno virtual del Dr. Wong'' . ''Doctor Wong'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Jesus Franco, Howard Vernon (in stock footage from Franco's ''The Curse of Frankenstein''), Rachel Sheppard and Analia Ivars; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Vampire Blues''||''Los blues del vampiro'' . ''Vampire Sex: Lady Dracula 3'' . ''Vampyr Blues'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Jesus Franco, Rachel Sheppard and Analia Ivars; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=2 | 1999 |
|||
| ''Red Silk''||''Seda Roja'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay and Christie Levin; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Broken Dolls''||''Muñecas Rotas'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay and Christie Levin; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=2 | 2000 |
|||
| ''Blind Target''||''Obietivo a Ciegas'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Rachel Sheppard, Linnea Quigley and Lina Romay; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Helter Skelter''|| || based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade; produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Rachel Sheppard and Analia Ivars; music by Daniel White; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2001 |
|||
| ''Vampire Junction''|| || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay and Fata Morgana; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=3 | 2002 |
|||
| ''Jess Franco's Incubus''||''Incubus'' || remake of Franco's ''Lorna, the Exorcist'' (1974); produced by Kevin Collins; starred Carina Palmer, Carsten Frank and Lina Romay; music by Daniel White; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Antenna Criminal: Making a Jess Franco Movie''||documentary on the making of ''Blind Target''|| directed by Brian Horrorwitz; starred Lina Romay, Kevin Collins, Jess Franco, Rachel Sheppard and Linnea Quigley |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''[[The Killer Barbies#Films|Killer Barbys vs. Dracula]]''||''Killer Barbys contra Dracula'' || produced by Kevin Collins; starred Lina Romay, Silvia Superstar, Katja Bienert, Aldo Sambrell, Carsten Frank and Fata Morgana; shot on video; released in 2003 |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=2 | 2003 |
|||
| ''Flowers of Perversion''||''Jess Franco's Perversion'' . ''Flores de perversion'' || produced by Franco; starred Lina Romay, Rachel Sheppard and Fata Morgana; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Flowers of Passion''||''Jess Franco's Passion'' . ''Flores de la Pasion'' || produced and directed by Franco; starred Fata Morgana, Lina Romay and Rachel Sheppard; music by Daniel White; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2005 |
|||
| ''Snakewoman''|| || produced by Kevin Collins; co-written by Jess Franco and Lina Romay; starred Lina Romay, Christie Levin, Antonio Mayans, Rachel Sheppard and Fata Morgana; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2008 |
|||
| ''A Bad Day at the Cemetery'' (Parts One and Two)||''La cripta de las mujeres malditas'' / ''Crypt of the Cursed Women'' || filmed in two parts; produced by Franco; starred Fata Morgana (who was also co-writer/cinematographer) and Carmen Montes; music by Daniel White; shot on video; Part One was released in 2008, Part Two was released in 2010 |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2009 |
|||
| ''Take-Away Spirit''|| || Franco co-wrote the script (with producer Kevin Collins) and acted in this film directed by Sol Clink; starred Jess Franco, Brad Frikkers and Amy Brown; filmed in England, Brooklyn, Virginia, Spain and China (shot on video) |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2010 |
|||
| ''Paula-Paula: An Audiovisual Experience''||''Paula-Paula'' || starred Carmen Montes and Lina Romay (in her last film); 66 minutes long, shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=2 | 2012 |
|||
| ''Al Pereira vs. the Alligator Women''||''Culitos in the Night'' . ''Al Pereira vs. the Alligator Ladies'' || co-written by Franco and Antonio Mayans; starred Antonio Mayans, Irene Verdu, Paula Davis, Carmen Montes and Jesus Franco; shot on video |
|||
|- |
|||
| ''Crypt of the Condemned'' (Parts One and Two)|| ''La cripta de las condenadas'' 1 & 2 || co-written by Franco and Fata Morgana; production started in 2008 and was finished in 2012; starred Fata Morgana, Carmen Montes and Franco; Lina Romay was art director; music by Daniel White; shot on video; released after Lina Romay's death<ref>Thrower,Stephen (2015). ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesus Franco''. Strange Attractor Press. p. 430</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| 2013 |
|||
| ''Revenge of the Alligator Women''||''Revenge of the Alligator Ladies'' || co-written and co-directed by Franco and Antonio Mayans; starred Antonio Mayans, Irene Verdu, Paula Davis and Carmen Montes; music by Jess Franco; shot on video; Franco's last film (it was released posthumously) |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{reflist|refs= |
|||
<references /> |
|||
<ref name="guardian">{{cite news | url = https://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/apr/05/jesus-franco | title = Jesús Franco obituary | last = Newman | first = Kim | date = 5 April 2013 | work = [[The Guardian]] | access-date = 2019-10-01 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190428071751/https://www.theguardian.com/film/2013/apr/05/jesus-franco | archive-date = 2019-04-28}}</ref> |
|||
<ref name="obit">{{cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=MoHGCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA119 | title = Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2013 | last = Lentz | first = Harris M. III | publisher = McFarland | year = 2014 | isbn = 978-1-4766-1652-0 | page = 119 }}</ref> |
|||
<ref name="sensacine">{{cite news | url = http://www.sensacine.com/noticias/cine/noticia-18511350 | title = Muere Jess Franco, padre de la serie B española | date = 2 April 2013 | last = Ruiz | first = Paula Arantzazu | access-date = 2019-10-01 | language = es | website = Sensacine.com | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190401070134/http://www.sensacine.com/noticias/cine/noticia-18511350/ | archive-date = 2019-04-01 }}</ref> |
|||
<ref name="thrower1">{{cite book | last1 = Thrower | first1 = Stephen | last2 = Grainger | first2 = Julian | year = 2015 | title = Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco | publisher = Strange Attractor Press | isbn = 978-1-907222-31-3 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=oycCoQEACAAJ}}</ref> |
|||
}} |
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== Further reading == |
== Further reading == |
||
* [French] Daniel Bastié, Jess Franco : L’homme aux 200 films, Ed. Grand Angle, 2014 |
|||
* [[Stephen Thrower]], ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco'' (2015) |
* [[Stephen Thrower]], ''Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco'' (2015) |
||
* Jess Franco, ''Memorias del tío Jess'' (2004) (autobiography, in Spanish) |
* Jess Franco, ''Memorias del tío Jess'' (2004) (autobiography, in Spanish) |
||
Line 545: | Line 99: | ||
* Alain Petit, ''Manacoa Files'' (1994–1999, in French) |
* Alain Petit, ''Manacoa Files'' (1994–1999, in French) |
||
* Lucas Balbo, Peter Blumenstock, Christian Kessler, [[Tim Lucas]], ''Obsession - The Films of Jess Franco'' (1993) |
* Lucas Balbo, Peter Blumenstock, Christian Kessler, [[Tim Lucas]], ''Obsession - The Films of Jess Franco'' (1993) |
||
* [[Stephen Thrower]], ''Flowers of Perversion: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco''. Strange Attractor Press. (2018) |
|||
* [[Tim Lucas]], "How to Read a Franco Film", in ''Video Watchdog'' #1 (1990){{cite web|url=http://users.aol.com/timothyp2/francofolder/horrotica/horrotica.html |archive-url=http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20091014061035/http://users.aol.com/timothyp2/francofolder/horrotica/horrotica.html |dead-url=yes |archive-date=2009-10-14 |title=Article |accessdate=2008-06-22 |df=dmy }} |
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* Tim Lucas, "How to Read a Franco Film", in ''Video Watchdog'' No. 1 (1990){{cite web|url=http://users.aol.com/timothyp2/francofolder/horrotica/horrotica.html |archive-url=http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20091014061035/http://users.aol.com/timothyp2/francofolder/horrotica/horrotica.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2009-10-14 |title=Article |access-date=22 June 2008 }} |
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* The book ''[[Immoral Tales: European Sex & Horror Movies 1956-1984]]'' (1994), by Cathal Tohill and Pete Tombs, dedicates a chapter to Franco. |
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* Xavier Mendik. "Perverse Bodies, Profane Texts: Processes of Sadeian 'Mixture' in the Films of |
* The book ''[[Immoral Tales: European Sex & Horror Movies 1956–1984]]'' (1994), by Cathal Tohill and [[Pete Tombs]], dedicates a chapter to Franco. |
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* Xavier Mendik. "Perverse Bodies, Profane Texts: Processes of Sadeian 'Mixture' in the Films of Jesús Franco" in Andy Black (ed.), ''Necronomicon: The Journal of Horror and Erotic Cinema Book Two'' London: Creation Books, 1998, pp. 6–29. |
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* Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer. ''Mädchen, Machos und Moneten: Die unglaubliche Geschichte des Schweizer Kinounternehmers Erwin C. Dietrich''. Mit einem Vorwort von [[Jess Franco]]. [http://www.scharfestiefel.ch Verlag Scharfe Stiefel], Zurich, 2006, {{ISBN|3-033-00960- |
* Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer. ''Mädchen, Machos und Moneten: Die unglaubliche Geschichte des Schweizer Kinounternehmers Erwin C. Dietrich''. Mit einem Vorwort von [[Jess Franco]]. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070917065116/http://www.scharfestiefel.ch/ Verlag Scharfe Stiefel], Zurich, 2006, {{ISBN|978-3-033-00960-8}} |
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* {{ |
* {{in lang|it}} Robert Monell, "Il codice segreto di Jesús Franco", in ''Nocturno Dossier n. 60'', luglio 2007 |
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*Robert Monell, essays on ''Devil Hunter''/''Il Cacciatore di Uomini'' and ''The Cannibals''/''White Cannibal Queen'' in ''Eaten Alive: Italian Cannibal and Zombie Movies'' pp. 145–148 Edited by Jay Slater, Plexus Publishing Limited, London (2002) |
*Robert Monell, essays on ''Devil Hunter''/''Il Cacciatore di Uomini'' and ''The Cannibals''/''White Cannibal Queen'' in ''Eaten Alive: Italian Cannibal and Zombie Movies'' pp. 145–148 Edited by Jay Slater, Plexus Publishing Limited, London (2002) |
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*Robert Monell, Foreword: "Jess |
*Robert Monell, Foreword: "Jess Franco—Cinema Degree Zero" in ''Il Caso Jesús Franco'', edited by Francesco Cesari, (2010, in English, Italian and Spanish) Granviale Editore, Venezia, Italy, pp. 11–12. |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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{{Commons category}} |
{{Commons category}} |
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* {{IMDb name|id=0001238|name=Jesús Franco}} |
* {{IMDb name|id=0001238|name=Jesús Franco}} |
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* [http://www.santoandfriends.com Santo and Friends] (Hispanic horror film index) |
* [http://www.santoandfriends.com Santo and Friends] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200216173542/http://www.santoandfriends.com/ |date=16 February 2020 }} (Hispanic horror film index) |
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{{Jesus Franco}} |
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{{Jesús Franco}} |
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{{Honorary Goya Award}} |
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Latest revision as of 20:51, 6 December 2024
Jesús Franco | |
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Born | Jesús Franco Manera 12 May 1930 Madrid, Spain |
Died | 2 April 2013 | (aged 82)
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1954–2013 |
Spouses |
|
Children | Caroline Riviere (stepdaughter from first marriage) |
Relatives | Julián Marías (brother-in-law) Ricardo Franco (nephew) |
Jesús Franco Manera (12 May 1930 – 2 April 2013), also commonly known as Jess Franco, was a Spanish filmmaker, composer, and actor, known as a highly-prolific director of low-budget exploitation and B-movies.[1] He worked in many different genres during his career, but was best known for his horror and erotic films, often incorporating surrealist elements.[1]
In a career spanning from 1954 to 2013, he wrote, directed, produced, acted in, and scored approximately 173 feature films,[1][a] working both in his native Spain and (during the rule of Francisco Franco) in France, West Germany, Switzerland and Portugal. Additionally, during the 1960s, he made several films in Rio de Janeiro and Istanbul.[1]
Franco's films are known for distinctive visual style and idiosyncratic approach to filmmaking, often directing multiple films concurrently.[1][2] Despite mixed critical reception during his lifetime, Franco's work has gained a dedicated cult following, and he is regarded as a significant figure in the history of exploitation cinema.[1][2] In 2009, he received an Honorary Goya Award from the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain for his contributions to Spanish cinema.[3]
Early life and education
[edit]Jesús Franco Manera was born in Madrid on 12 May 1930, to a prominent family of Cuban and Mexican origin.[1] His brother, Enrique Franco, was the vice president of the Albéniz Foundation. Via his sister Dolores, Franco was the brother-in-law of philosopher Julián Marías, and the uncle of filmmaker Ricardo Franco.
A lifelong jazz enthusiast and pianist, Franco studied music at the Madrid Royal Conservatory and the Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu, before embarking on a film career. He studied at Madrid's Instituto de Investigaciones y Experiencias Cinematográficas, and the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques in Paris.[4] He cited among his influences Luis Buñuel, Stanley Donen, Vincente Minnelli, and Orson Welles.[1]
During this time, he supported himself by working as a pianist in nightclubs and writing pulp novels under the pen name 'David Khune', which he later adopted as one of his directing aliases. He also directed stage plays.
Career
[edit]Franco began his career in 1954 (aged 24) as an assistant director in the Spanish film industry, performing many tasks including composing music for some films as well as co-writing a number of the screenplays. He assisted directors such as Joaquín Luis Romero Marchent, León Klimovsky and Juan Antonio Bardem. After working on more than 20 films for other directors, he decided to get into directing films himself in 1959, making a few musicals and a crime drama called Red Lips.
In 1960, Franco took Marius Lesoeur and Sergio Newman, two producer friends, to a cinema to see the newly released Hammer horror film The Brides of Dracula and the three men decided to go into the horror film business. His career took off in 1962 with The Awful Dr. Orloff (a.k.a. Gritos en la noche), which received wide distribution in the USA and the United Kingdom. Franco wrote and directed Orloff, and even supplied some of the music for the film. In the mid-1960s, he went on to direct two other horror films, then proceeded to turn out a number of James Bond-like spy thrillers and softcore sex films based on the works of the Marquis de Sade (which remained one of his major influences throughout his career).
Although he had some American box office success with Necronomicon - Geträumte Sünden (1968), 99 Women (1969) and two 1969 Christopher Lee films – The Bloody Judge and Count Dracula – he never achieved wide commercial success. Many of his films were only distributed in Europe, and most of them were never dubbed into English.
With Soledad Miranda
[edit]After discovering Soledad Miranda (he first used her in his film Count Dracula), Franco moved from Spain to France in 1969 so that he could make more violent and erotic films free of the strict censorship in Spain at the time, and it was at this point that his career began to go downhill commercially as he turned to low-budget filmmaking with an accent on adult material. Miranda starred in a series of six erotic thrillers for Franco, all made within a one-year period (one of which Sex Charade was never released), after which she was killed in a tragic automobile accident in Portugal in 1970 just as her career was taking off. She and Franco had started filming her next project (Justine) which he abandoned entirely after her death. (Only about 40 minutes of the movie was shot at the time of her death). He had also planned to feature her in his next film, X312: Flight to Hell, which he made with another actress.[5]
With Lina Romay
[edit]A year or two after Miranda died, a grieving Franco discovered a new leading lady in actress Lina Romay. At the time, the teenage Romay was married to a young actor/photographer named Ramon Ardid (aka "Raymond Hardy"), who co-starred with Lina in 19 Franco films in the 1970s. But as Romay and Franco became more involved in their film projects together over the years, her marriage to Ardid broke up in 1975 and ended in divorce in 1978 (Ardid continued working with Franco however until 1979).[5]
Franco in adult film Sexorcismes (1975) was involved in a non-simulated sex scene with Romay.[6]
Franco was married at the time to Nicole Guettard (their marriage running approximately from 1962 to 1980), Ms. Guettard being gradually replaced in Franco's life by Romay. Guettard worked as a script consultant on some of Franco's films while they were married (sometimes credited as Nicole Franco), and even acted in a few of them. Her daughter from an earlier marriage, Caroline Riviere, also acted in a few Franco films in the early 1970s (including the risqué Exorcisme and The Perverse Countess). Guettard died in 1996.
Franco and Romay worked together for 40 years, and lived together from 1980 onward, although they were only officially married on 25 April 2008. Until her death in 2012 (from cancer, aged 57), Romay was his most regular actress, as well as his life companion and muse. Romay starred in approximately 109 Jesús Franco films, more than any other actor or actress. Although Romay was listed in the credits of several films as a co-director, actor Antonio Mayans stated in a recent interview that Franco used to credit her in that manner for business reasons, although she never actually co-directed any of their films together.[5]
Although he produced a number of relatively successful horror films in the early 1970s (Dracula vs. Frankenstein, The Bare-Breasted Countess, A Virgin Among the Living Dead), many people in the industry considered him a porn director due to the huge number of X-rated adult films he began turning out (even his 1970s horror films featured abundant nudity). Franco returned to low-budget horror films in a brief comeback period from 1980 to 1983 (Mondo Cannibale, Bloody Moon, Oasis of the Zombies, Mansion of the Living Dead and Revenge in the House of Usher), but after 1983, his career took a second downturn as he returned to making mostly pornographic films, most of which left nothing to the imagination.
In his later years, he did, however, get the opportunity to turn out two rather big-budget horror films – Faceless (1988) and Killer Barbys (1996) – both of which showed what great work he could still do when his projects were adequately funded. The entirety of his work after 1996 (beginning with Tender Flesh) was shot-on-video films of very low quality, none of which were distributed theatrically. Romay died of cancer in 2012 at age 57, after which Franco died on April 2, 2013, from natural causes at age 82.[7]
Zombie Lake vs. Oasis of the Zombies
[edit]Franco was supposed to write and direct a film for Eurocine Productions in 1980 called Lake of the Living Dead (a horror film about revived Nazi zombies) but after submitting the basic plot summary, he fell out with the producers, Marius and Daniel Lesoeur, over the ridiculously low budget he was allotted, and the producers immediately hired French horror film director Jean Rollin to direct it (later re-titling it Zombie Lake).
The Lesoeurs later had Rollin shoot new (zombie) footage in 1981 to be added to Franco's A Virgin Among the Living Dead (1973) for its 1981 theatrical rerelease. Franco's original director's cut of the film was later made available on DVD.[5]
Franco later directed another film for the Lesouers called Oasis of the Zombies (a.k.a. Bloodsucking Nazi Zombies on VHS) in 1981, which had a plot very similar to Zombie Lake (also involving revived Nazi zombies). It was released in France as The Abyss of the Living Dead.[5] Franco simultaneously shot a variant Spanish-language version of Oasis of the Zombies at the producers' expense, starring Lina Romay and his "regulars", which was apparently released only in Spain in 1982 as La Tumba de los Muertos Vivientes.[5]
Filmmaking style and themes
[edit]Franco sometimes worked under various pseudonyms, including David Khune and Frank Hollmann. A fan of jazz music (and a musician himself), many of his pseudonyms were taken from jazz musicians such as Clifford Brown and James P. Johnson.
Franco's themes often revolved around lesbian vampires, women in prison, surgical horror, sadomasochism, zombies and sexploitation (including numerous films based on the writings of the Marquis de Sade). He worked in other exploitation film genres, such as cannibal films, spy films, giallo, crime films, science fiction, jungle adventure, Oriental menace, exorcist films, war movies, historical dramas and nunsploitation. His sex movies often contained long, uninterrupted shots of nude women writhing around on beds. Most of his hardcore films starred his lifelong companion Lina Romay (sometimes billed as "Candy Coster" or "Lulu Laverne"), who admitted in interviews to being an exhibitionist.
Franco was known for his use of a hand-held camera and zoom shots, which he felt lent realism to his films. He also was not averse to filming several movies at the same time, knocking together a second feature on the unsuspecting producer's dime. Many of his actors only found out years after the fact that Franco had actually starred them in films for which they had never even been paid.
His main claim to fame, however, is that he managed to direct approximately 173 motion pictures in his lifetime,[5] encompassing a wide swathe of different genres with practically no financial backing available to him. (Note: Some sources which list as many as 200 titles in Franco's filmography are relisting the same films several times under their different variant titles.)
Sometimes referred to as the "European Ed Wood",[8][9] Franco similarly attracted a circle of bizarre but loyal actors and technicians who moved with him over the years from project to project (while receiving very little, if any, money for their efforts). Many of his actors were over-the-hill performers in the twilight of their careers, many of his actresses brazen exhibitionists. He frequently worked with genre actors Lina Romay (who appeared in 109 Franco films), Antonio Mayans (who appeared in 50 Franco films),[5] Howard Vernon (who appeared in 40 Franco films),[5] Paul Müller (who appeared in 15 Franco films), Monica Swinn (who appeared in 15 Franco films), and Christopher Lee (who appeared in 7 Franco films). His frequent cast members also included Jack Taylor, Ewa Strömberg, Anne Libert, Soledad Miranda, Maria Rohm, William Berger, Dennis Price, Olivier Mathot, Muriel Montosse (a.k.a. Victoria Adams), Alice Arno, Montserrat Prous, Alberto Dalbés, Britt Nichols, Pamela Stanford, Mabel Escaño, Kali Hansa, Carmen Carrión and Klaus Kinski, all of whom are well known to Euro horror film historians.
Death
[edit]Franco suffered a severe stroke on 27 March 2013, and was taken to a hospital in Málaga, Spain, where he died six days later, on the morning of 2 April. He was 82.[10]
Filmography
[edit]See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Sources list only 173 films in Franco's filmography. Other titles listed were simply re-edited or censored versions of the same films, adapted for different markets.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Thrower, Stephen; Grainger, Julian (2015). Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco. Strange Attractor Press. ISBN 978-1-907222-31-3.
- ^ a b "The Strange Case Of Jess Franco". Austin Film Society. 12 May 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
- ^ "Erotic horror king Franco to receive Lifetime Achievement Goya". Cineuropa - the best of european cinema. 21 November 2008. Retrieved 25 May 2024.
- ^ Newman, Kim (5 April 2013). "Jesús Franco obituary". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 28 April 2019. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Stephen Thrower, Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco (2015)
- ^ "The close-ups of his penetrating penis, tongue and fingers in Sexorcismes provide rudimentary hypervisibility but seem contrived." Ward, Glenn: Journeys into Perversion: Vision, Desire and Economies of Transgression in the Films of Jess Franco. University of Sussex, May 2011. p. 200.
- ^ Ruiz, Paula Arantzazu (2 April 2013). "Muere Jess Franco, padre de la serie B española". Sensacine.com (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
- ^ "Obsession: The Films of Jess Franco (First Edition) by Lucas and Peter Blumenstock Balbo (Editors); Howard Vernon (Foreword); Carlos Aguilar, Jack Taylor, William Berger, Monica Swinn, Jess Franco (Contributors) | Search for rare books | ABAA".
- ^ "Remembering Jesus Franco, the Spanish Master of 1970s Softcore Horror". 30 October 2014.
- ^ Lentz, Harris M. III (2014). Obituaries in the Performing Arts, 2013. McFarland. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-4766-1652-0.
Further reading
[edit]- [French] Daniel Bastié, Jess Franco : L’homme aux 200 films, Ed. Grand Angle, 2014
- Stephen Thrower, Murderous Passions: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco (2015)
- Jess Franco, Memorias del tío Jess (2004) (autobiography, in Spanish)
- Stéphane du Mesnilot, Jess Franco - Énergies du fantasme (2004, in French)
- Alain Petit, Manacoa Files (1994–1999, in French)
- Lucas Balbo, Peter Blumenstock, Christian Kessler, Tim Lucas, Obsession - The Films of Jess Franco (1993)
- Stephen Thrower, Flowers of Perversion: The Delirious Cinema of Jesús Franco. Strange Attractor Press. (2018)
- Tim Lucas, "How to Read a Franco Film", in Video Watchdog No. 1 (1990)"Article". Archived from the original on 14 October 2009. Retrieved 22 June 2008.
- The book Immoral Tales: European Sex & Horror Movies 1956–1984 (1994), by Cathal Tohill and Pete Tombs, dedicates a chapter to Franco.
- Xavier Mendik. "Perverse Bodies, Profane Texts: Processes of Sadeian 'Mixture' in the Films of Jesús Franco" in Andy Black (ed.), Necronomicon: The Journal of Horror and Erotic Cinema Book Two London: Creation Books, 1998, pp. 6–29.
- Benedikt Eppenberger, Daniel Stapfer. Mädchen, Machos und Moneten: Die unglaubliche Geschichte des Schweizer Kinounternehmers Erwin C. Dietrich. Mit einem Vorwort von Jess Franco. Verlag Scharfe Stiefel, Zurich, 2006, ISBN 978-3-033-00960-8
- (in Italian) Robert Monell, "Il codice segreto di Jesús Franco", in Nocturno Dossier n. 60, luglio 2007
- Robert Monell, essays on Devil Hunter/Il Cacciatore di Uomini and The Cannibals/White Cannibal Queen in Eaten Alive: Italian Cannibal and Zombie Movies pp. 145–148 Edited by Jay Slater, Plexus Publishing Limited, London (2002)
- Robert Monell, Foreword: "Jess Franco—Cinema Degree Zero" in Il Caso Jesús Franco, edited by Francesco Cesari, (2010, in English, Italian and Spanish) Granviale Editore, Venezia, Italy, pp. 11–12.
External links
[edit]- Jesús Franco at IMDb
- Santo and Friends Archived 16 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine (Hispanic horror film index)
- 1930 births
- 2013 deaths
- Film directors from Madrid
- Spanish film producers
- Spanish cinematographers
- German-language film directors
- Spanish horror film directors
- Honorary Goya Award winners
- Spanish male film actors
- Spanish people of Cuban descent
- Spanish people of Mexican descent
- Spanish pornographic film directors
- Spanish male pornographic film actors
- Institut des hautes études cinématographiques alumni
- Male actors from Madrid