scene from Slava Tsukerman's "liquid sky"
Liquid Sky is a 1982 science fiction film produced and directed by Slava Tsukerman that has become a cult classic on the midnight movie circuit. The screenplay, which features an absurd storyline, was written by Slava, his wife Nina Kerova, and Anne Carlisle, and the director of photography, Yuri Neyman was a special-effects expert from the Soviet Union. Anne Carlisle also wrote a novel based on the movie (same title, ISBN 0-385-23930-0) in 1987.
The film had a $500,000 budget, which meant that Tsukerman and his wife had to use a renovated Greenwich Village loft as the sound stage. The music for the film was composed by Brenda Hutchinson and Clive Smith using the Fairlight CMI, the first digital sampler/synthesiser. Much of it was original, while some songs were interpretations of music by Carl Orff and Baroque composer Marin Marais. The film is out of print and only a limited number of VHS tape re-issues and DVDs were produced. The film, however, does run occasionally on the Sundance Channel.
olives in an adult diaper
Decades81 6 months ago
@TimHayes
I read that it was implied that she retired from acting after she didn't get the lead in "The Clan of the Cave Bear" and she's now married and living in Seattle, Washington with her husband and daughter.
Bluebelle9289 1 year ago
I don't think she was blacklisted for playing a lesbian. Either she died or she wanted out of acting or she got out of acting, became a mom and then died.
TimHayes 1 year ago
This is one of the best poems from the 80s, actually. It resonates well with today's constructivist nihilists as well as the mantras of the no-more-bullshit generation. I like this remix, of course, but the original is just as penetrating.
swensonia 1 year ago
she was such a hot piece of ass. Too bad she couldn't get work after this movie. The lesbian sex scene blackballed her
PhuckHue2 2 years ago