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Eyes of Laura Mars

Eyes of Laura Mars is a 1978 American neo-noir supernatural horror[3] thriller film directed by Irvin Kershner and starring Faye Dunaway, Tommy Lee Jones, Brad Dourif, René Auberjonois, and Raul Julia. It follows a New York City fashion photographer (Dunaway) who suddenly develops the clairvoyant ability to witness disturbing serial murders from the point of view of the killer. The screenplay was adapted (in collaboration with David Zelag Goodman) from a spec script titled Eyes, written by John Carpenter; it was Carpenter's first major studio film. H. B. Gilmour later wrote a novelization.

Eyes of Laura Mars
Theatrical release poster
Directed byIrvin Kershner
Screenplay by
Story byJohn Carpenter
Produced byJon Peters
Starring
CinematographyVictor J. Kemper
Edited byMichael Kahn
Music byArtie Kane
Production
company
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • August 2, 1978 (1978-08-02)
Running time
104 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7 million[1]
Box office$20 million[2]

Producer Jon Peters, who was dating Barbra Streisand at the time, bought the screenplay as a starring vehicle for her, but Streisand eventually decided not to take the role because of "the kinky nature of the story", as Peters later explained. As a result, the role went to Dunaway, who had just won an Oscar for her performance in Network (1976). Streisand nevertheless felt that "Prisoner", the torch song from the film, would be a good power ballad vehicle for her. She recorded the song for the soundtrack and it peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100. Peters commissioned photographer Helmut Newton to provide the images that stand in for Laura Mars' portfolio in the film.[4]

Released on August 2, 1978, by Columbia Pictures, the film was a box-office success, grossing $20 million domestically. Some critics and film scholars have noted Eyes of Laura Mars as an American version of the Italian giallo[5] with elements of the slasher film,[6][7] and it has gone on to develop a small cult following.[8]

Plot edit

Laura Mars is a glamorous New York City fashion photographer who specializes in photographs featuring stylized violence, which attract controversy from the press and feminists who feel her work is exploitative. The night before the release of her photography book The Eyes of Mars, Laura has a dream about an assailant entering a woman's apartment, which she observes from the first-person perspective of the intruder. The following night at the book release party, Laura is notified that her photo editor, Doris, has been found murdered, her eyes gouged with an ice pick.

Shortly thereafter, during a photoshoot in Columbus Circle, Laura has another disturbing vision of a woman being stabbed to death outside her apartment, and stumbles upon the crime scene while passing by on the street. Laura informs police she witnessed the crime, but is unable to rationalize how. She later learns that the victim, Elaine, has been romantically involved with her ex-husband Michael, a writer who had been living in San Francisco but returned to New York.

John Neville, the lieutenant in charge of the case, shows Laura unpublished police photographs of unsolved murders that very closely mirror Laura's fashion shoots. Laura's visions continue, including visions of the killer stalking her and continuing to murder those around her. While developing photographs in her darkroom, Laura has another vision of her models Lulu and Michelle being brutally murdered. After attending Lulu and Michelle's funerals, Laura finds herself growing close to Neville, and the two begin a romance. He gives her a gun for her own protection.

Meanwhile, police consider Laura's driver Tommy, an ex-convict, and Michael to be their prime suspects in the string of serial killings. While attending a birthday party for her agent Donald, Laura receives a phone call from a drunken Michael, who is threatening suicide. Donald urges her against helping him, but Laura leaves the party. While driving to meet Michael, Laura has a vision of Donald being murdered by the killer, which causes her to crash her car. Later, Neville is informed that photographs of the murdered models have been found in Tommy's apartment. Police try to arrest him but shoot him dead when he tries to escape.

At her apartment, Laura is affected by a vision of the killer murdering Michael. The killer attempts to break in through her front door, but Laura deadbolts it before the killer can enter. Upon hearing her distress, Neville (who had been on his way to meet her) breaks through her balcony window. He proceeds to tell Laura that Tommy was the killer and begins an elaborate explanation of his motivations and backstory. Knowing Tommy well, Laura recognizes this as a lie. Neville, still talking about the killer, uses "I". Laura realizes that Neville is the killer. Neville details more of his own story, slipping between multiple personalities. When the violent personality tries to kill Laura, his more sensitive personality reasserts dominance. He takes her hand, which holds the gun he gave her, and asks her to kill him. Distraught, she does so before calling the police.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

The film's source story was written by John Carpenter, as was the earliest version of the screenplay.[3] Producer Jack H. Harris had worked with Carpenter on the latter's feature-film directorial debut, Dark Star, and it was Harris who optioned Carpenter's 11-page treatment, then titled simply Eyes.[9]

Harris planned to make the film independently of the major studios with privately raised finance and Roberta Collins in the lead. But Harris's friend Jon Peters read the treatment, and upon reading it, he became enthusiastic about its potential as a vehicle for Peters's then-girlfriend Barbra Streisand. Peters got interest from Peter Guber at Columbia and they agreed to finance the project's development. Streisand pulled out of the film, but Columbia were sufficiently enthusiastic about the script to move forward with another actress, and Faye Dunaway was cast. However, as a condition of this, the studio insisted on the script being rewritten, hiring David Zelag Goodman to undertake the rewrites.[10] "It wasn't a pleasant experience", said Carpenter. "The original script was very good, I thought. But it got shat upon."[11]

Filming edit

Filming took place over 56 days from October 17, 1977, to early January 1978.[12] The film was shot entirely in New York and New Jersey, with filming locations including New York City; Jersey City, New Jersey; and Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York.[12] A sequence where the Laura Mars character photographs a group of models against a backdrop of two burning cars was filmed over four days at New York's Columbus Circle. It was reported that Peters and Dunaway had a tense relationship while making the film.

Soundtrack edit

Eyes of Laura Mars (Music from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) was released by Columbia Records (PS 35487) in 1978 ahead of the film's release.[13] It was produced by Gary Klein with executive producers Jon Peters and Charles Koppelman.

Mark Iskowitz of The Barbra Streisand Music Guide wrote: "The side one 'Prisoner' track is actually identical to the single and Greatest Hits Volume 2 version. The side two reprise version does contain instrumentation from the film score at the beginning and during the first sections of the song, which is featured in its entirety. Track 3 opens with Barbra singing the first four lines from 'Prisoner' with a sparse, spooky film score backing."

The Eyes of Laura Mars LP is out of print; it was never released on CD.

Track listing edit

Side one
No.TitleWriter(s)ArtistLength
1."Prisoner (Love Theme from Eyes of Laura Mars)"
Barbra Streisand3:53
2."Laura's Nightmare"Artie KaneArtie Kane2:06
3."Burn"
  • George Michalski
  • Nikki Oosterveen
Michalski & Oosterveen4:16
4."Elaine"KaneArtie Kane1:25
5."Laura & Neville (Instrumental)"KaneArtie Kane2:33
6."Medley:
Native New Yorker
(Shake, Shake, Shake) Shake Your Booty
Prisoner (Disco Instrumental)"
Various:
Various:
Odyssey
KC and the Sunshine Band
Artie Kane
4:33
Side two
No.TitleWriter(s)ArtistLength
1."Laura – Warehouse"KaneArtie Kane1:11
2."Let's All Chant"
Michael Zager Band4:05
3."Laura & Neville (Dialogue & Vocal)"KaneArtie Kane2:33
4."Lulu & Michelle"KaneArtie Kane3:06
5."Love & Pity"KaneArtie Kane4:10
6."Love Theme from Eyes of Laura Mars (Prisoner) – Reprise"
  • Lawrence
  • DeSautels
Barbra Streisand3:56

Reception edit

Box office edit

Eyes of Laura Mars premiered in Los Angeles on August 2, 1978.[12] The film was a box-office success, grossing $20 million in the United States.[2][14]

Critical response edit

On its release, the film received mixed critical reviews. The film received a broadly positive review in The New York Times, in which Janet Maslin called the ending of the film "dumb", but otherwise liked it. She wrote of it: "It's the cleverness of Eyes of Laura Mars that counts, cleverness that manifests itself in superlative casting, drily controlled direction from Irvin Kershner, and spectacular settings that turn New York into the kind of eerie, lavish dreamland that could exist only in the idle noodlings of the very, very hip."[15]

Roger Ebert was less enthusiastic, giving the film one-and-a-half stars out of four and criticizing what he called the film's clichéd "woman in trouble" plot.[16]

In his book Historical Dictionary of Horror Films (2017), writer Peter Hutchings describes Eyes of Laura Mars as an "upmarket slasher film."[6]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 61% based on 38 reviews, with an average rating of 5.6/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Eyes of Laura Mars hints at interesting possibilities, but they're frittered away by a predictable story that settles for superficial thrills."[17]

George Lucas hired director Kershner for The Empire Strikes Back (1980) because he was impressed after seeing a rough cut of the film.[18]

A parody of the film titled Eyes of Lurid Mess was published in Mad magazine. It was illustrated by Angelo Torres and written by Larry Siegel in regular issue #206, April 1979.[19]

Home media edit

Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment first released the film on DVD in 2000.[20] Mill Creek Entertainment released a Blu-ray edition in 2019,[21] while Kino Lorber issued a special edition Blu-ray in October 2022.[22]

Legacy edit

In the years since its release, film scholars have likened Eyes of Laura Mars to the American equivalent of the Italian giallo film.[5] It has also developed a small cult following[8] and had retrospective revival screenings, including at the Seattle International Film Festival in 2023.[7]

Along with 1977 Italian giallo film Sette note in nero (English Title: The Psychic or Seven Notes in Black), it was unofficially adapted into the 1984 Tamil film Nooravathu Naal,[23] which itself was remade into the 1991 Hindi-language 100 Days.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ Ginsberg, Steven (August 2, 1978). "Jon Peters Org Develops 16 Features". Variety. p. 7.
  2. ^ a b Nowell 2010, p. 257.
  3. ^ a b Muir 2015, p. 195.
  4. ^ Griffin & Masters 1996, p. 54.
  5. ^ a b Edwards & Berns 2023, p. 235.
  6. ^ a b Hutchings 2017, p. 63.
  7. ^ a b "Movie Club: Eyes of Laura Mars". Seattle International Film Festival. October 4, 2023. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
  8. ^ a b Barson, Michael (April 25, 2023). "Irvin Kershner Biography". Encyclopædia Britannica. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
  9. ^ Muir 2015, pp. 16, 195.
  10. ^ Muir 2015, p. 196.
  11. ^ McCarthy, Todd (January–February 1980). "Trick and Treat". Film Comment. Vol. 16, no. 1. pp. 17–24.
  12. ^ a b c "Eyes of Laura Mars (1978)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  13. ^ Graham, Chuck (August 1, 1978). "Debby Boone offers a bomb". Tucson Citizen. p. 4B – via Newspapers.com.
  14. ^ "Eyes of Laura Mars (1978)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved May 21, 2023.
  15. ^ Maslin, Janet (August 4, 1978). "Screen: 'Eyes of Laura Mars'". The New York Times. Retrieved June 21, 2023.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger (1978). "Eyes of Laura Mars". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved April 30, 2020 – via RogerEbert.com.
  17. ^ "Eyes of Laura Mars". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  18. ^ Trachtenberg, Cecil (April 22, 2019). "Exploring Eyes of Laura Mars – The Disco Giallo". GoodBadFlicks. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved April 22, 2019 – via YouTube.
  19. ^ "Mad #206 April 1979". Doug Gilford's Mad Cover Site.
  20. ^ "Eyes of Laura Mars DVD". WorldCat. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
  21. ^ Khan, Imran (January 30, 2020). "'Eyes of Laura Mars' is Best as a Document of '70s New York". PopMatters. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
  22. ^ "Eyes of Laura Mars Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Archived from the original on May 21, 2023.
  23. ^ "100 days". The Indian Express. 7 June 1991. p. 7. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  24. ^ "Here's Why Jackie Shroff Starrer 100 days Still Makes for an Interesting Thriller Watch!". 4 December 2020.

Bibliography edit

External links edit


eyes, laura, mars, 1978, american, noir, supernatural, horror, thriller, film, directed, irvin, kershner, starring, faye, dunaway, tommy, jones, brad, dourif, rené, auberjonois, raul, julia, follows, york, city, fashion, photographer, dunaway, suddenly, develo. Eyes of Laura Mars is a 1978 American neo noir supernatural horror 3 thriller film directed by Irvin Kershner and starring Faye Dunaway Tommy Lee Jones Brad Dourif Rene Auberjonois and Raul Julia It follows a New York City fashion photographer Dunaway who suddenly develops the clairvoyant ability to witness disturbing serial murders from the point of view of the killer The screenplay was adapted in collaboration with David Zelag Goodman from a spec script titled Eyes written by John Carpenter it was Carpenter s first major studio film H B Gilmour later wrote a novelization Eyes of Laura MarsTheatrical release posterDirected byIrvin KershnerScreenplay byJohn CarpenterDavid Zelag GoodmanStory byJohn CarpenterProduced byJon PetersStarringFaye Dunaway Tommy Lee Jones Brad Dourif Rene Auberjonois Raul JuliaCinematographyVictor J KemperEdited byMichael KahnMusic byArtie KaneProductioncompanyColumbia PicturesDistributed byColumbia PicturesRelease dateAugust 2 1978 1978 08 02 Running time104 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 7 million 1 Box office 20 million 2 Producer Jon Peters who was dating Barbra Streisand at the time bought the screenplay as a starring vehicle for her but Streisand eventually decided not to take the role because of the kinky nature of the story as Peters later explained As a result the role went to Dunaway who had just won an Oscar for her performance in Network 1976 Streisand nevertheless felt that Prisoner the torch song from the film would be a good power ballad vehicle for her She recorded the song for the soundtrack and it peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 Peters commissioned photographer Helmut Newton to provide the images that stand in for Laura Mars portfolio in the film 4 Released on August 2 1978 by Columbia Pictures the film was a box office success grossing 20 million domestically Some critics and film scholars have noted Eyes of Laura Mars as an American version of the Italian giallo 5 with elements of the slasher film 6 7 and it has gone on to develop a small cult following 8 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Filming 4 Soundtrack 4 1 Track listing 5 Reception 5 1 Box office 5 2 Critical response 6 Home media 7 Legacy 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksPlot editLaura Mars is a glamorous New York City fashion photographer who specializes in photographs featuring stylized violence which attract controversy from the press and feminists who feel her work is exploitative The night before the release of her photography book The Eyes of Mars Laura has a dream about an assailant entering a woman s apartment which she observes from the first person perspective of the intruder The following night at the book release party Laura is notified that her photo editor Doris has been found murdered her eyes gouged with an ice pick Shortly thereafter during a photoshoot in Columbus Circle Laura has another disturbing vision of a woman being stabbed to death outside her apartment and stumbles upon the crime scene while passing by on the street Laura informs police she witnessed the crime but is unable to rationalize how She later learns that the victim Elaine has been romantically involved with her ex husband Michael a writer who had been living in San Francisco but returned to New York John Neville the lieutenant in charge of the case shows Laura unpublished police photographs of unsolved murders that very closely mirror Laura s fashion shoots Laura s visions continue including visions of the killer stalking her and continuing to murder those around her While developing photographs in her darkroom Laura has another vision of her models Lulu and Michelle being brutally murdered After attending Lulu and Michelle s funerals Laura finds herself growing close to Neville and the two begin a romance He gives her a gun for her own protection Meanwhile police consider Laura s driver Tommy an ex convict and Michael to be their prime suspects in the string of serial killings While attending a birthday party for her agent Donald Laura receives a phone call from a drunken Michael who is threatening suicide Donald urges her against helping him but Laura leaves the party While driving to meet Michael Laura has a vision of Donald being murdered by the killer which causes her to crash her car Later Neville is informed that photographs of the murdered models have been found in Tommy s apartment Police try to arrest him but shoot him dead when he tries to escape At her apartment Laura is affected by a vision of the killer murdering Michael The killer attempts to break in through her front door but Laura deadbolts it before the killer can enter Upon hearing her distress Neville who had been on his way to meet her breaks through her balcony window He proceeds to tell Laura that Tommy was the killer and begins an elaborate explanation of his motivations and backstory Knowing Tommy well Laura recognizes this as a lie Neville still talking about the killer uses I Laura realizes that Neville is the killer Neville details more of his own story slipping between multiple personalities When the violent personality tries to kill Laura his more sensitive personality reasserts dominance He takes her hand which holds the gun he gave her and asks her to kill him Distraught she does so before calling the police Cast editFaye Dunaway as Laura Mars Tommy Lee Jones as Lieutenant John Neville Brad Dourif as Tommy Ludlow Rene Auberjonois as Donald Phelps Raul Julia as Michael Reisler Frank Adonis as Detective Sal Volpe Lisa Taylor as Michelle Darlanne Fluegel as Lulu Rose Gregorio as Elaine Cassel Bill Boggs as himself Steve Marachuk as Robert Meg Mundy as Doris Spenser Marilyn Meyers as Sheila Weissman John Sahag as a hairdresserProduction editDevelopment edit The film s source story was written by John Carpenter as was the earliest version of the screenplay 3 Producer Jack H Harris had worked with Carpenter on the latter s feature film directorial debut Dark Star and it was Harris who optioned Carpenter s 11 page treatment then titled simply Eyes 9 Harris planned to make the film independently of the major studios with privately raised finance and Roberta Collins in the lead But Harris s friend Jon Peters read the treatment and upon reading it he became enthusiastic about its potential as a vehicle for Peters s then girlfriend Barbra Streisand Peters got interest from Peter Guber at Columbia and they agreed to finance the project s development Streisand pulled out of the film but Columbia were sufficiently enthusiastic about the script to move forward with another actress and Faye Dunaway was cast However as a condition of this the studio insisted on the script being rewritten hiring David Zelag Goodman to undertake the rewrites 10 It wasn t a pleasant experience said Carpenter The original script was very good I thought But it got shat upon 11 Filming edit Filming took place over 56 days from October 17 1977 to early January 1978 12 The film was shot entirely in New York and New Jersey with filming locations including New York City Jersey City New Jersey and Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale New York 12 A sequence where the Laura Mars character photographs a group of models against a backdrop of two burning cars was filmed over four days at New York s Columbus Circle It was reported that Peters and Dunaway had a tense relationship while making the film Soundtrack editEyes of Laura Mars Music from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack was released by Columbia Records PS 35487 in 1978 ahead of the film s release 13 It was produced by Gary Klein with executive producers Jon Peters and Charles Koppelman Mark Iskowitz of The Barbra Streisand Music Guide wrote The side one Prisoner track is actually identical to the single and Greatest Hits Volume 2 version The side two reprise version does contain instrumentation from the film score at the beginning and during the first sections of the song which is featured in its entirety Track 3 opens with Barbra singing the first four lines from Prisoner with a sparse spooky film score backing The Eyes of Laura Mars LP is out of print it was never released on CD Track listing edit Side oneNo TitleWriter s ArtistLength1 Prisoner Love Theme from Eyes of Laura Mars Karen LawrenceJohn DeSautelsBarbra Streisand3 532 Laura s Nightmare Artie KaneArtie Kane2 063 Burn George MichalskiNikki OosterveenMichalski amp Oosterveen4 164 Elaine KaneArtie Kane1 255 Laura amp Neville Instrumental KaneArtie Kane2 336 Medley Native New Yorker Shake Shake Shake Shake Your BootyPrisoner Disco Instrumental Various Sandy LinzerDenny RandellHarry Wayne CaseyRichard FinchArtie KaneVarious OdysseyKC and the Sunshine BandArtie Kane4 33 Side twoNo TitleWriter s ArtistLength1 Laura Warehouse KaneArtie Kane1 112 Let s All Chant Michael ZagerAlvin FieldsMichael Zager Band4 053 Laura amp Neville Dialogue amp Vocal KaneArtie Kane2 334 Lulu amp Michelle KaneArtie Kane3 065 Love amp Pity KaneArtie Kane4 106 Love Theme from Eyes of Laura Mars Prisoner Reprise LawrenceDeSautelsBarbra Streisand3 56Reception editBox office edit Eyes of Laura Mars premiered in Los Angeles on August 2 1978 12 The film was a box office success grossing 20 million in the United States 2 14 Critical response edit On its release the film received mixed critical reviews The film received a broadly positive review in The New York Times in which Janet Maslin called the ending of the film dumb but otherwise liked it She wrote of it It s the cleverness of Eyes of Laura Mars that counts cleverness that manifests itself in superlative casting drily controlled direction from Irvin Kershner and spectacular settings that turn New York into the kind of eerie lavish dreamland that could exist only in the idle noodlings of the very very hip 15 Roger Ebert was less enthusiastic giving the film one and a half stars out of four and criticizing what he called the film s cliched woman in trouble plot 16 In his book Historical Dictionary of Horror Films 2017 writer Peter Hutchings describes Eyes of Laura Mars as an upmarket slasher film 6 On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 61 based on 38 reviews with an average rating of 5 6 10 The website s critics consensus reads Eyes of Laura Mars hints at interesting possibilities but they re frittered away by a predictable story that settles for superficial thrills 17 George Lucas hired director Kershner for The Empire Strikes Back 1980 because he was impressed after seeing a rough cut of the film 18 A parody of the film titled Eyes of Lurid Mess was published in Mad magazine It was illustrated by Angelo Torres and written by Larry Siegel in regular issue 206 April 1979 19 Home media editColumbia TriStar Home Entertainment first released the film on DVD in 2000 20 Mill Creek Entertainment released a Blu ray edition in 2019 21 while Kino Lorber issued a special edition Blu ray in October 2022 22 Legacy editIn the years since its release film scholars have likened Eyes of Laura Mars to the American equivalent of the Italian giallo film 5 It has also developed a small cult following 8 and had retrospective revival screenings including at the Seattle International Film Festival in 2023 7 Along with 1977 Italian giallo film Sette note in nero English Title The Psychic or Seven Notes in Black it was unofficially adapted into the 1984 Tamil film Nooravathu Naal 23 which itself was remade into the 1991 Hindi language 100 Days 24 References edit Ginsberg Steven August 2 1978 Jon Peters Org Develops 16 Features Variety p 7 a b Nowell 2010 p 257 a b Muir 2015 p 195 Griffin amp Masters 1996 p 54 a b Edwards amp Berns 2023 p 235 a b Hutchings 2017 p 63 a b Movie Club Eyes of Laura Mars Seattle International Film Festival October 4 2023 Archived from the original on May 21 2023 a b Barson Michael April 25 2023 Irvin Kershner Biography Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on May 21 2023 Muir 2015 pp 16 195 Muir 2015 p 196 McCarthy Todd January February 1980 Trick and Treat Film Comment Vol 16 no 1 pp 17 24 a b c Eyes of Laura Mars 1978 AFI Catalog of Feature Films Retrieved May 1 2020 Graham Chuck August 1 1978 Debby Boone offers a bomb Tucson Citizen p 4B via Newspapers com Eyes of Laura Mars 1978 Box Office Mojo Retrieved May 21 2023 Maslin Janet August 4 1978 Screen Eyes of Laura Mars The New York Times Retrieved June 21 2023 Ebert Roger 1978 Eyes of Laura Mars Chicago Sun Times Retrieved April 30 2020 via RogerEbert com Eyes of Laura Mars Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 29 2024 Trachtenberg Cecil April 22 2019 Exploring Eyes of Laura Mars The Disco Giallo GoodBadFlicks Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved April 22 2019 via YouTube Mad 206 April 1979 Doug Gilford s Mad Cover Site Eyes of Laura Mars DVD WorldCat Archived from the original on May 21 2023 Khan Imran January 30 2020 Eyes of Laura Mars is Best as a Document of 70s New York PopMatters Archived from the original on May 21 2023 Eyes of Laura Mars Blu ray Blu ray com Archived from the original on May 21 2023 100 days The Indian Express 7 June 1991 p 7 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Here s Why Jackie Shroff Starrer 100 days Still Makes for an Interesting Thriller Watch 4 December 2020 Bibliography edit Edwards Matthew Berns Fernando Gabriel Pagnoni eds 2023 Bloodstained Narratives The Giallo Film in Italy and Abroad Jackson Mississippi University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 4968 4449 1 Griffin Nancy Masters Kim 1996 Hit amp Run How Jon Peters and Peter Guber Took Sony for a Ride in Hollywood New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 6848 0931 1 Hutchings Peter 2017 Historical Dictionary of Horror Cinema Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 5381 0244 2 Muir John Kenneth 2007 Horror Films of the 1970s Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 9156 8 Muir John Kenneth 2015 The Films of John Carpenter Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 9348 7 Nowell Richard 2010 Blood Money A History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4411 2496 8 External links editEyes of Laura Mars at IMDb nbsp Eyes of Laura Mars at AllMovie nbsp Eyes of Laura Mars at Box Office Mojo nbsp Eyes of Laura Mars at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp Eyes of Laura Mars at the American Film Institute Catalog nbsp Eyes of Laura Mars at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eyes of Laura Mars amp oldid 1210747403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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