School for Sex | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pete Walker |
Written by | Pete Walker |
Produced by | Pete Walker |
Starring | Derek Aylward Rose Alba Hugh Latimer Nosher Powell Françoise Pascal |
Cinematography | Reg Phillips |
Edited by | John Black |
Music by | Harry South |
Production company | Pete Walker-Border |
Distributed by | Miracle |
Release date |
|
Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £2.5 million (in US) [1] |
School for Sex is a 1969 British sex comedy film directed, produced and written by Pete Walker. [2] [3]
The film was shot on location in Kent, Sussex and London, England.[ citation needed]
In France it there were 72,000 admissions in its opening week. [1]
Monthly Film Bulletin said "As its title indicates, Peter Walker's latest piece of titillatory entertainment is largely a peg on which to hang an assortment of bikinis and diminutive undergarments. But after a relatively lively start, this nonsensical and determinedly risqué farce plods humourlessly on its way with leaden dialogue, wooden acting and rough sound recording." [4]
School for Sex | |
---|---|
Directed by | Pete Walker |
Written by | Pete Walker |
Produced by | Pete Walker |
Starring | Derek Aylward Rose Alba Hugh Latimer Nosher Powell Françoise Pascal |
Cinematography | Reg Phillips |
Edited by | John Black |
Music by | Harry South |
Production company | Pete Walker-Border |
Distributed by | Miracle |
Release date |
|
Running time | 80 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Box office | £2.5 million (in US) [1] |
School for Sex is a 1969 British sex comedy film directed, produced and written by Pete Walker. [2] [3]
The film was shot on location in Kent, Sussex and London, England.[ citation needed]
In France it there were 72,000 admissions in its opening week. [1]
Monthly Film Bulletin said "As its title indicates, Peter Walker's latest piece of titillatory entertainment is largely a peg on which to hang an assortment of bikinis and diminutive undergarments. But after a relatively lively start, this nonsensical and determinedly risqué farce plods humourlessly on its way with leaden dialogue, wooden acting and rough sound recording." [4]