Fred Lincoln shows empathy for his characters in this Kaylan Nicole vehicle, a VHS era release with heart.
She plays an actress anxious about starring in a remake of a classic 1948 Hollywood movie. With Joey Silvera as the director, who wouldn't be worried?
On her first day of shooting, with the original locations at the original '40s studio, she finds a diary kept by the leading man back then, and reads about his final day of the shoot in which he was likewise anxious, so taken with his leading lady and looking forward to their love scene.
His ghost, played by Jon Dough, magically appears and Kaylan gets a first-person view of how the original movie was made. We see in both black and white and color the 1948 love scene with leading lady Melissa Hill, XXX style, with Dough relating how the explicit footage ended up on the cutting room floor (natch, for G-rated 1948).
Hill died tragically that night in a car crash, and Dough later on.
Lincoln's movie climaxes with Kaylan glamorous on set in a lovely gown, making love to the ghost, followed by an effective brief coda.
Another example of how the underrated Fred Lincoln made many a fine movie in his prolific career, unfortunately just taken for granted.
She plays an actress anxious about starring in a remake of a classic 1948 Hollywood movie. With Joey Silvera as the director, who wouldn't be worried?
On her first day of shooting, with the original locations at the original '40s studio, she finds a diary kept by the leading man back then, and reads about his final day of the shoot in which he was likewise anxious, so taken with his leading lady and looking forward to their love scene.
His ghost, played by Jon Dough, magically appears and Kaylan gets a first-person view of how the original movie was made. We see in both black and white and color the 1948 love scene with leading lady Melissa Hill, XXX style, with Dough relating how the explicit footage ended up on the cutting room floor (natch, for G-rated 1948).
Hill died tragically that night in a car crash, and Dough later on.
Lincoln's movie climaxes with Kaylan glamorous on set in a lovely gown, making love to the ghost, followed by an effective brief coda.
Another example of how the underrated Fred Lincoln made many a fine movie in his prolific career, unfortunately just taken for granted.