Julie Darling | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Nicholas |
Written by | Paul Nicholas Maurice Smith |
Produced by | Maurice Smith Ernest Von Theummer |
Production companies | TAT Productions Cinequity Corporation |
Release dates |
1985 (US) [1] |
Running time | 90 mins |
Countries | Canada West German |
Language | English |
Julie Darling is a 1982 Canadian-West German film written and directed by Paul Nicholas. [2] It was co written and produced by Maurice Smith. The film was shot in West Germany and Canada. [3]
It was also known as Daughter of Death.
Director Paul Nicholas and Danning later made Chained Heat together.
A teenage girl is obssessed with her father and is determined to murder her stepmother.
Filming took place in late 1981 in Toronto. [4]
The Daily News called it "a fairly tight little sleaze thriller, further hoisted by professional performances, steady pacing and a neat plot twist or two." [5]
Shock Cinema said the film was "Chock full of surprises and shocks, which include attempted child suffocation, bloody shotgun wounds, a broken glass bottle groin-stabbing, and a great knock-out surprise ending, with Danning giving a strong and sympathetic performance to add to the film’s viewing pleasure." [6]
Julie Darling | |
---|---|
Directed by | Paul Nicholas |
Written by | Paul Nicholas Maurice Smith |
Produced by | Maurice Smith Ernest Von Theummer |
Production companies | TAT Productions Cinequity Corporation |
Release dates |
1985 (US) [1] |
Running time | 90 mins |
Countries | Canada West German |
Language | English |
Julie Darling is a 1982 Canadian-West German film written and directed by Paul Nicholas. [2] It was co written and produced by Maurice Smith. The film was shot in West Germany and Canada. [3]
It was also known as Daughter of Death.
Director Paul Nicholas and Danning later made Chained Heat together.
A teenage girl is obssessed with her father and is determined to murder her stepmother.
Filming took place in late 1981 in Toronto. [4]
The Daily News called it "a fairly tight little sleaze thriller, further hoisted by professional performances, steady pacing and a neat plot twist or two." [5]
Shock Cinema said the film was "Chock full of surprises and shocks, which include attempted child suffocation, bloody shotgun wounds, a broken glass bottle groin-stabbing, and a great knock-out surprise ending, with Danning giving a strong and sympathetic performance to add to the film’s viewing pleasure." [6]