Gay blade zorro

Synopsis

Zexy, Zany, Zensational!

In 19th century Mexico, celebrated swordsman Zorro has passed on his weapon and his sense of duty to his noble son, Diego, a dashing swashbuckler prefer his father. But after an injury sidelines Diego, he is forced to hand the mask over to his twin, Ramon.

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Alternative Titles

El Zorro: The Gay Blade, Zorro mezzo e mezzo, Zorro mit der heißen Klinge, La Grande Zorro, As Duas Faces de Zorro, Zorro, a penge, Estos zorros locos, locos, locos, Zorro, ostrá čepeľ, 粉雄佐罗

Theatrical

17 Jul

  • USAPG

21 Jan

  • Germany6

TV

25 Mar

  • Slovakia12
Germany
Slovakia
USA

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who couldn't love a movie in which gay george hamilton teaches straight george hamilton that the revolution requires transcending the limits of masculinity

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Marathon - Clip #74

Spread the news, that he is back!
To assist the helpless!
To befriend the friendless!
And to defeat er, the "featless."

This goofy ode to the original Zorro movies is manic, br

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It is becoming something of a ‘thing’ for film-makers to point out their inspirations by having a movie theatre screening a favourite movie prominently placed within their work. That’s fine if, as in It: Chapter 1, the point is to pin down in time the specific summer that Derry’s local cinema is representing Batman and Lethal Weapon 2.  The device feels a bit more laboured when Zack Snyder pans over a cinema exhibiting Excalibur in Batman Vs Superman, or in the shot below where Todd Phillips recreates the marquee signage from Brian De Palma’s Blow Out in Joker.

Equally prominent in the same shot is Peter Medak’s Zorro The Homosexual Blade, a rather more neglected text that De Palma’s super-effective thriller. Why include George Hamilton’s ‘zany, zexy, spectacular’ parody of the much loved swordsman?  Could Arthur Fleck own been diverted from his murderous purpose if he’d just let a small spray-tanned self-deprecation good humour into his life? The bottom line is that while real-world movies look to exist in both DC and Marvel universes, it&#;s kind of challenging to see how Zorro

Zorro, The Gay Blade

June 8,

I often enjoy reading novel adaptations of films to compare what was either left in from the original script before filming, or to see what the author added to give the two-hour film depth and backstory. Unfortunately, the only thing that never really makes it from the film Zorro, the Queer Blade and its novelization is the humor. This isn't really a knock against the creator, Les Dean (although I execute question the addition of the novel's reincarnation-themed prologue, and can only forgive it if it was in fact part of the original screenplay), but rather the harsh reality of an impossible task. Zorro, the Same-sex attracted Blade is a film that gains the majority of its laughs from the over-the-top performances of it's man actors, George Hamilton and Ron Leibman (and to a lesser extent - for reasons explained in a moment, Lauren Hutton and Brenda Vaccaro). This could be said of most films, but in this case, much of the humor is derived from over-exaggerated mispronunciations of George Hamilton's Don Diego Vega character in his thick Spanish accent. It's silly, juvenile

It is hard to reconstruct these fragments from the memories of childhood but as nearly as I can remember, the Zorro craze came after the Davy Crockett craze and before Elvis. Kids made Z marks everywhere &#; on walls, fences, blackboards, and with ballpoints on the shirts of the kids sitting in front of them &#; and my personal notion is that Datsun sells half of their Z-cars to guys harboring sublimated Zorro fantasies.

Here&#;s the curious thing. I remember a lot about Zorro. I even remember that he was once played by Clayton Moore, who got to keep wearing his Lone Ranger mask. But I cannot remember if the Zorro movies were ever supposed to be comical. I assume that the Zorros, played by Douglas Fairbanks, Tyrone Power, and John Carroll, were more or less serious, within the broad outlines of the adventure genre. But what about all the Zorro movies and TV shows that Guy Williams made for Disney? Were we laughing at him, or with him?

I seek because I am just as confused after seeing &#;Zorro, the Gay Blade,&#; which stars George Hamilton in a dual role as Don Diego Vega and his tw