Loving Feeling | |
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![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Norman J. Warren |
Written by | Robert Hewison Bachoo Sen Norman J. Warren |
Produced by | Bachoo Sen |
Starring |
Georgina Ward Simon Brent Paula Patterson |
Cinematography | Peter Jessop |
Edited by | Tristam Cones |
Music by | John Scott |
Production company | Piccadilly Pictures |
Distributed by | Richard Schulman Entertainments |
Release date |
|
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £30,000 [1] |
Loving Feeling is a 1968 British sex comedy-drama film directed by Norman J. Warren and starring Simon Brent, Georgina Ward and Paula Patterson. [2]
Steve Day, a womanising DJ, wants to get back with his wife Suzanne, from whom he is separated. Obstacles to the reunion include Suzanne's new love, Scott Fisher, and Steve's affairs with a secretary, Carol, Carol's flatmate and a French model.
The film was shot at Isleworth Studios with sets designed by the art director Hayden Pearce.
David Wilson of Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Crude miscellany of episodes from the sex life of a singularly unprepossessing disc jock who drifts from bed to bed with a casual indifference to anyone's feelings – loving or otherwise. Execrably scripted and limply acted, the whole tedious business is put across with an air of half-hearted contrivance which the unsynchronised dialogue only compounds." [3]
Loving Feeling | |
---|---|
![]() Film poster | |
Directed by | Norman J. Warren |
Written by | Robert Hewison Bachoo Sen Norman J. Warren |
Produced by | Bachoo Sen |
Starring |
Georgina Ward Simon Brent Paula Patterson |
Cinematography | Peter Jessop |
Edited by | Tristam Cones |
Music by | John Scott |
Production company | Piccadilly Pictures |
Distributed by | Richard Schulman Entertainments |
Release date |
|
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £30,000 [1] |
Loving Feeling is a 1968 British sex comedy-drama film directed by Norman J. Warren and starring Simon Brent, Georgina Ward and Paula Patterson. [2]
Steve Day, a womanising DJ, wants to get back with his wife Suzanne, from whom he is separated. Obstacles to the reunion include Suzanne's new love, Scott Fisher, and Steve's affairs with a secretary, Carol, Carol's flatmate and a French model.
The film was shot at Isleworth Studios with sets designed by the art director Hayden Pearce.
David Wilson of Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Crude miscellany of episodes from the sex life of a singularly unprepossessing disc jock who drifts from bed to bed with a casual indifference to anyone's feelings – loving or otherwise. Execrably scripted and limply acted, the whole tedious business is put across with an air of half-hearted contrivance which the unsynchronised dialogue only compounds." [3]