Is it possible for a struggling independent film director to make a science fiction film today for less than a million dollars? It doesn’t seem likely but it could be possible if the director is driven, highly creative and blessed with a team of uniquely gifted collaborators. That was certainly the case for Russian émigré Slava Tsukerman in 1982 when he embarked on his American feature film debut, Liquid Sky. Made for approximately $500,000 and produced during a 28-day shooting schedule, the film became an overnight sensation, winning special awards at film festivals around the globe and attracting adventurous filmgoers to a long run at New York City midnight movie screenings.
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The Stiletto Club
Conspiracy thrillers have been a popular subgenre in movies ever since the silent era with such memorable entries as The Ace of Hearts (1921) in which Lon Chaney stars as a member of a secret society that gets rid of people deemed unfit to live among them. Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps (1935) is an equally menacing early talkie classic and The Manchurian Candidate (1962), about a brainwashed ex-military hero being controlled by political subversives, is probably the best-known representative of all. However, it wasn’t until the 1970s that conspiracy thrillers reached an all-time high in popularity as witnessed by such iconic Hollywood releases as The Parallax View (1974), The Conversation (1974), Three Days of the Condor (1975), Capricorn One (1977) and The Boys from Brazil (1978). Other countries contributed their own variations on the genre like Spain, which released La Casa sin Fronteras (English title: The House Without Frontiers), a deeply unsettling effort from director Pedro Olea, which was made while General Franco was still in power and which prefigures the paranoid scenarios made popular by The Parallax View and others.
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