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AlexG.
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March 2, 2008 at 2:32 am #67866
phenoms
ParticipantA long time ago I saw a movie with a very well endowed actress in it. I recall her boobs being around the size of Jayne Mansfield's.
I do not know the name of the movie, or the name of the actress. I only remember a few details about the movie. I have tried to figure it out by searching the Internet and imdb but with no luck. I even tried looking at the filmography of Jayne Mansfield herself just in case it had been her. The only movie I found with details that were close was called "The Lost Continent". It is not that movie. I know that much.
So this is what I remember about it…
The movie was either in black and white or in Technicolor. It was set at sometime between the 1940's and 1960's. A large boat gets caught in a mysterious mist and then crashes into a giant island of seaweed. I guess it was supposed to be set in the Bermuda Triangle / Sargasso Sea. They find a bunch of other boats have been shipwrecked too from many different places and many different time periods. There is a lot of in-fighting on the island and many power struggles. There is a giant man-eating sea creature, either a giant squid or giant octopus. The newcomers must overcome both the monster and the in-fighting.The woman had long, straight or wavy, dark brown or black hair and wore a beat up dress that I think might have been bear skin or something. She had a curvy, voluptuous figure and extremely large breasts. I do not think she was from the same ship as the newcomers, and I am uncertain if she spoke the same language. I do remember that she spent a good deal of time with the newcomers.
I remember the movie having a very campy feel to it. Obviously it was a B-movie plot and acting. Thats about all I can remember.
The reason I do not think that the movie was "The Lost Continent" is that 2 of the 3 the actresses are blonde and none have large enough breasts. Actress Dana Gillespie who played Sarah is Brunette and has large breasts, but is no where close to being Jayne Mansfield sized.
I hope that someone can help name the movie and actress that I have described.
Thank you.
phenoms
PS- I am cross posting this at the BEA forum. Hopefully someone at one of the two boards will have some idea of what movie and of what actress.
My Deviant Art Page (old stuff):
phenoms.deviantart.comMy Booru Gallery (new stuff):
phenoms.booru.orgAlso
www.thevalkyrie.com/picthumb/p/phenoms/index00.htm
www.thevalkyrie.com/picthumb/p/phenom_fett/index00.htmMarch 12, 2008 at 3:51 pm #67867Holiday
ParticipantSorry, phenoms. There isn't enough info for me to find what you're talking about. I've got a TLA Video catalog and the Science Fiction Encylopedia. I can't find anything that fits yours description.
March 12, 2008 at 4:47 pm #67868AlexG
KeymasterEven so, your description does sound a lot like The Lost Continent, which came out in '68. Perhaps your movie is a previous version of it.
Just a thought, but the T.L.C. movie screenplay is based upon the novel "Uncharted Seas" by Dennis Wheatley, you might try using that in a backward search.
One other possibly, are you certain it was earlier. There was a short-lived sci-fi series in the 70's called Fantastic Journey, which also took place on an island in the Bermuda Triangle. The cast of characters (one of whom was rather Amazonian in persona) as they progressed further into the interior of the island would pass through barriers, and encounter other times and realities and civilizations.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)March 15, 2008 at 4:04 am #67869phenoms
ParticipantI think it may have been TLC and Dana after all.
http://members.fortunecity.com/noops132/dana_gillespie0022.jpg
Wish I could watch it again to satisfy my lingering doubts.
Thanks for the replies.
phenomsMy Deviant Art Page (old stuff):
phenoms.deviantart.comMy Booru Gallery (new stuff):
phenoms.booru.orgAlso
www.thevalkyrie.com/picthumb/p/phenoms/index00.htm
www.thevalkyrie.com/picthumb/p/phenom_fett/index00.htmMarch 15, 2008 at 4:55 am #67870fasola
Participanthttp://members.fortunecity.com/noops132/dana_gillespie0022.jpg
Can somebody explain me what I'm seeing in that picture?
March 16, 2008 at 9:47 pm #67871AlexG
KeymasterCan somebody explain me what I'm seeing in that picture?
You're getting a denial message from the Fortune City server.
Its the same sort of firewall thing you encounter with Yahoo-Geocities, Lycos, Angelfire, etc.
If you're interested in seeing what phenoms posted, then you're going to have to use this link
http://members.fortunecity.com/noops132/
When the page comes up, go to the letter D and scroll down to Dana Gillespie and click on the link to see her gallery page.
BTW – I agree that it was probably TLC that you were thinking of, as the entry for The Fantastic Journey refreshed my memory about the atlantean amazonian character Liana as played by Katie Saylor. Though not buffed, (this was the 1970s after all) she was still quite the uberbabe.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)March 16, 2008 at 9:56 pm #67872fasola
ParticipantActually Alex, I know about Fortune City's denial of direct-linking. What I was asking, is if somebody can explain me what I am supposes to see in the image. Are they actually wearing ballons and "lifeboats" on their shoes?
March 16, 2008 at 11:03 pm #67873AlexG
KeymasterSorry about that. :-[
Yes, they are (were?) wearing balloons and rafts on their feet (I have an old VHS tape of that movie). The people are supposed to be descended of those from the 16th century, and I presume one of their ancestors was familiar with technological concepts of Leonardo da Vinci, who had a similar idea for walking on water.
By the way, if I'm recalling correctly, the idea was later re-used, in a manner of speaking, in the Drew Barrymore movie "Ever After" by the da Vinci character, who found it didn't work as well as he thought out on paper and prompt sank in the river.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907) -
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