Intimate Games

Summary

Intimate Games is a 1976 British sex comedy directed by Tudor Gates and Martin Campbell[citation needed] and starring George Baker, Anna Bergman and Ian Hendry.[2]

Intimate Games
Directed by
Written byTudor Gates
Produced byGuido Coen
Starring
CinematographyFrank Watts
Edited byPat Foster
Music byRoger Webb
Production
company
Podenhale Productions
Distributed byTigon Film Distributors
Release date
June 1976
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Budget£60,000[1]

Plot edit

Professor Gottlieb pairs his psychology students and instructs them to write down each other's sexual fantasies. The students take the opportunity put their desires into practice, and later send Gottlieb their accounts. Back in class, Gottlieb imagines the girls naked and is driven away in an ambulance foaming at the mouth.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film was shot at Twickenham Studios and on location in Oxford.[citation needed]

Critical reception edit

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "A cast of fresh-faced girls and clean-limbed young men cavort through this grindingly unfunny British sex comedy in apparent ignorance of the debilitating constraints of its coy, assembly-line plot. The discomfort of troupers like George Baker and Ian Hendry at participating in this tedious nonsense is, however, as apparent as the absence of passion from the decorous, dimly-lit lesbian love-making. A half-hearted attempt at placing the movie in a scientific context (by a last-minute voice-over warning against abnormal fantasies) is as strikingly unconvincing as all the permutations of sexual mimicry which have gone before."[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Fowler, Roy (26 November 2003). "Interview with Tudor Gates Side Five". British Entertainment History Project.
  2. ^ "Wonderwall". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 27 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Intimate Games". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 43 (504): 127. 1 January 1976 – via ProQuest.

External links edit

  • Intimate Games at IMDb  
  • Intimate Games then-and-now location photographs at ReelStreets