Sylvia
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SYLVIA is a racy, action- packed, fast-moving, in-depth study about severely berated human behavior. Not since Three Faces Of Eve has a film attempted to so clearly define a true history of multiple personality disorder. Sylvia DConstant (Joanna Bell) is seemingly a quiet, reserved, saintly person, living on a quiet, reserved, well-manicured street in upper-middle class suburbia.
From the opening of this film, the viewer becomes involved in the gamut of intrique, twists, turns, and always the unexpected as we experience ... Sylvia.
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Summer Of Laura
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Along a lonely beach on a summer colony off the Long Island coast, a man walks slowly, reliving a summer, the SUMMER OF LAURA, when he was 19. Richie, (David Hunter), has a friend on the island, Gene (Eric Edwards), who is gregarious and mischievous. Like the more sensitive Richie, he too was 19. During that summer of awakening, he loses his youthful desires and develops his manhood. On the way to the movie, Richie literally bumps into Laura, (introducing Marcia Moon), and older woman who lives nearby. She asks him if hell help her with some chores the following day. He is totally flustered, but agrees. Richie goes to her house and after knocking on the door, but getting no response, enters. On the floor he finds a crumpled telegram which reads. Your husband, Bob Hayes, has been killed in action. Laura appears, lonely and vulnerable. She moves toward him in a gesture of human contact. They slowly begin to dance. That summer we lost 5 frisbees, saved a girl from a silly snake, saw our first skin flick, and I lost my Laura. The sea rises and the past is over.
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