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  1. View full company info for Peppercorn-Wormser Film Enterprises (US) 1. Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom. 1975 1h 57m TV-MA. 5.8 (67K) Rate. In World War II Italy, four fascist libertines round up nine adolescent boys and girls and subject them to 120 days of physical, mental, and sexual torture. 2. Chimes at Midnight. 1965 1h 55m Not Rated. 7.6 (10K)

  2. The Hitter is a 1979 American blaxploitation action film directed by Christopher Leitch and written by Christopher Leitch and Ben Harris. The film stars Ron O'Neal, Sheila Frazier, Adolph Caesar, Bill Cobbs, Dorothi Fox and Alfie Brown. The film was released in February 1979, by Peppercorn-Wormser Film Enterprises. [ 1][ 2] Plot.

    • A Creative Slant on Shakespeare
    • Welles’ Personal Self-Analysis
    • Incredible Production Scope and Scale

    Chimes at Midnight isn’t the first time that Welles looked to Shakespeare for inspiration; much of Citizen Kane’s narrative is based on the tenets of tragedy that can be found in The Bard’s most heartbreaking stories. Welles directed versions of Othello and Hamlet, each of which thoughtfully and dutifully captured the same beautiful words and broug...

    Like all of his work, Welles put a lot of personal insight and emotion into Chimes at Midnight. Interestingly, all of Welles’ films have a personal connection to the age that he was at when he made them. Citizen Kane is the story of the loss of childhood innocence told by a young man, and The Lady From Shanghai showed Welles as a confused bachelor ...

    Welles has always been a showman, and it’s no surprise that he so often ran into production setbacks and financial issues with his films, as they all required massive sets and groundbreaking technical achievements. Welles spared no expense in bringing the castles and battlefields of medieval times to life in stunning detail; the Battle of Shrewsbur...

    • Liam Gaughan
    • Erin Brady
    • Heart of Darkness. What it was about: This film was supposed to adapt Joseph Conrad's novella of the same name, with Welles playing the starring role of Charles Marlow.
    • The Way to Santiago. What it was about: Based on Arthur Calder-Marshall's book of the same name, this movie would have been partly a love story and partly a World War II espionage thriller.
    • The Life of Christ. What it was about: The title might seem like it says it all, but Welles was looking to do something different for this biblical movie.
    • Moby Dick – Rehearsed. What it was about: This movie was not slated to be your traditional film, as it was actually a recorded stage production of Welles' take on "Moby Dick."
  3. Feb 22, 2009 · FALSTAFF (“Chimes at Midnight”); adapted by Orson Welles from William Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Parts I and II; directed by Mr. Welles; produced by Emiliano Piedra and Angel Escolano; presented by Harry Saltzman and released by Peppercorn-Wormser, Inc. Film Enterprises.

  4. Films produced by Peppercorn-Wormser Inc. Service. Amazon US; Amazon Video US; Apple TV Plus US; Apple TV US; Upgrade to a Letterboxd Pro account to add your favorite services to this list—including any service and country pair listed on JustWatch—and to enable one-click filtering by all your favorites.

  5. May 3, 2022 · Peppercorn-Wormser Film Enterprises. The second half of Orson Welles' career is filled with fascinating experiments, from the essay documentary "F for Fake" to the meta Hollywood satire "The...