With Passion And Heat

With Passion And Heat 1981

1

Do Do Hae is a confident and outgoing young woman who is the daughter of the chairman of the Sindongyang Corporation. She works to help abused women. Ahn Min Bok is a veteran cop who lives for his daughter Yeong Hee. But Yeong Hee falls in love with Jung Eui Han who spends nights at the police station after curfew. Eui Han begins to work as a security guard at the Sindongyang building. He gets into an argument with Do Hae. She tries to get back at Eui Han but fails again and soon finds herself attracted to him. When she finds out that Eui Han and Yeong Hee are engaged, she bids them a happy marriage while hiding her tears

1981

Josh

Josh 1981

1

Bollywood 1981

1981

Danda Gopuram

Danda Gopuram 1981

1

Motion picture directed by P. Chandrakumar

1981

Listen to London

Listen to London 1981

1

"Listen to London" is the Re-Released 1981 music documentary about the The UK Post Punk Indy Rebellion, by US Filmmakers Steve Sattler and Des Horsfield. It features the original seven piece Thompson Twins and 12 other bands playing live and in the studio, including New Musik, BIM, Rio and the Robots and Kan Kan. Also Interviews with Charlie Gillett of Oval Records, Tom Bailey, Stephan Street, Tony Mansfield and many of the fans. Scenes at Radio London and Rough Trade and on the London Streets. "Listen to London" captures a seminal moment in the evolution of British Music as the bands began to break away from the stifling control of the record companies. details at: www.listentolondon.com

1981

Urge to Build

Urge to Build 1981

1

Urge to Build is a 1981 American short documentary film directed by Roland Hallé about individuals building their own homes. They share the experience and the different phases of construction, providing a background for more human issues: stress, confidence, and control of one's own life. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Short.

1981

Karagoez catalogo 9,5

Karagoez catalogo 9,5 1981

3.00

Excerpts from a collection of 9.5mm films dating from 1900 to 1928—including theatrical films, anthropological documentaries, and home movies—that reveal much about life during the silent-film era. —MoMa

1981