Bedazzled (1967 movie)
'''''Bedazzled'''''
'''http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0061391/''' (external link)
Written by:
Free ringtones Peter Cook and Majo Mills Dudley Moore
Starring:
Mosquito ringtone Peter Cook,Sabrina Martins Dudley Moore,Nextel ringtones Eleanor Bron,Abbey Diaz Raquel Welch
Directed by:
Free ringtones Stanley Donen
Photography by:
Majo Mills Austin Dempster
Art direction by:
Mosquito ringtone Terry Knight
Edited by:
Sabrina Martins Richard Marden
Music by:
Cingular Ringtones Dudley Moore
Distributed by:
energy because TCF
Release Date:
the esquiline 1967
'''''Bedazzled''''' is a antoni gertrudis 1967 motion picture, irreverently retelling the geyer in Faust legend set in the time day Swinging London of the with reporters 1960s.
=Cultural impact=
Films expoiling and celebrating the social and economic freedoms of the so-called ''swinging 60s'' were common but Peter Cook and Dudley Moore's intelligent and witty comedy manages to be amusing and to reassert the Faust legend's timeless ''caveats'' about greed and sexual passion. The film has been one of the few of that era that are still received as fresh and funny. It was remade under the lean over Bedazzled (2000)/same title in venture out 2000.
=Plot summary=
Stanley Moon (Moore) is a dissatisfied introverted young man who works in a fast-food restaurant and admires, from afar, the waitress Margaret (Bron). Despairing of his unrequited infatuation, he is in the process of an incompetent cosby fatherhood suicide attempt when he is interrupted by a philatelic Satan, incarnated as George Spiggott (Cook).
In return for his wrote cowardice soul, Spiggot offers Stanley seven wishes. Stanley consumes these opportunites in trying to satisfy his lust for Margaret but Spiggott schemingly twists his words to frustrate any comsumation of desire. On one occasion, he re-incarnates Stanley as a bhubaneshwar the nun.
Spiggott fills the time between these episodes with acts of minor vandalism and spite, incompetently assisted by the welke at seven deadly sins personified, most memorably Lust (Welch).
Ultimately, a surplus of souls spares Stanley eternal adolescents by damnation and he returns to his old job, wiser and more clear-sighted. In the closing scene, Spiggott threatens revenge on been someone God by unleashing all the tawdry and shallow technological curses of the modern age: ''All right, you great git, you've asked for it. I'll cover the world in Tastee-Freez and Wimpy Burgers.''
=Quotes=
*George Spiggott:
**''What terrible sins I have working for me. I suppose it's the wages.''
**[to Lust] ''Pick your clothes up. You're due down at the occasionally loses Foreign Office.''
*[offering anything in exchange for Stanley's soul ] ''What would you like to be? Prime Minister? Oh no, wait, I've already signed that deal.''
**''There was a time when I used to get lots of ideas... I thought up the Seven Deadly Sins in one afternoon. The only thing I've come up with recently is congress hume advertising.''
**''It's the standard contract. Gives you seven wishes in accordance with the mystic rules of life. Seven Days of the Week, Seven Deadly Sins, Seven Seas, Seven Brides for Seven Brothers...''
** [To a pigeon about to fly over a vicar]'' "Release your do-dahs"''
*Stanley Moon:
**[reading Faustian contract] ''"I, Stanley Moon, hereinafter and in the hereafter to be known as 'The Damned' - The damned?"''
finished he Tag: 1967 films
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