Two to Tango

Two to Tango is a 1989 American-Argentine suspense film. It was one in a number of ten movies Roger Corman produced in Argentina during the 1980s.[1][2]

Two to Tango
Directed byHéctor Olivera
Produced byRoger Corman
Alejandro Sessa
Written byYolande Turner
José Pablo Feinmann
Beverly Gray (additional dialogue)
Based onLast Days of the Victim
by José Pablo Feinmann
StarringDon Stroud
Adrianne Sachs
Duilio Marzio
Michael Cavanaugh
Alberto Segado
Music byÓscar Cardozo Ocampo
CinematographyLeonardo Rodríguez Solís
Edited byEduardo López
Production
company
Aries Cinematográfica Argentina
Concorde-New Horizons
New Horizons Picture
Distributed byAries Cinematográfica Argentina
Release date
  • 8 April 1982 (1982-04-08)
Running time
87 minutes
CountryArgentina
United States
LanguageEnglish
Spanish

Synopsis

A professional assassin falls in love.

Cast

  • Don Stroud ... James Conrad
  • Adrianne Sachs ... Cecilia Lorca
  • Duilio Marzio ... Paulino Velasco
  • Michael Cavanaugh ... Dean Boyle
  • Alberto Segado ... Lorenzo 'Lucky' Lara
  • Francisco Cocuzza ... Carlos Pino
  • Golde Flami ... Hilda Levin
  • Nathán Pinzón ... Morelos
  • Juan José Ghisalberti ... Joseph Levin
  • Ricardo Hamlin ... Bates
  • Jose Luis Cabrera ... Tango Dancer
  • Pablo Novak ... Sergio
  • Adriana Salonia ... Adela
  • Ana Maria Vita ... Boarder 1 at Levin's Hotel
  • Alejandra De Luiggi ... Boarder 2 at Levin's Hotel
  • Flávia Aberg Cobo ... Airline Attendant 1
  • Maria Fournery ... Airline Attendant 2
  • Armando Capo ... Angelo
  • Ricardo Fasan ... Paolo Basso (as Ricardo Fassan)
  • Lilian Rinar ... Blonde Woman
  • Gianni Fiore ... Customs Employee (as Gianni Fiori)
  • Daniel Ripari ... Bodyguard 1
  • Arturo Noal ... Bodyguard 2
  • Rubén Bermúdez ... Bodyguard 3
  • Nestor Cannichio ... Lara's Driver

Production

The film was based on the classic novel Ultimas dias de la victima, by Argentine screenwriter, philosopher and novelist Jose Pablo Feinmann. The book was adapted as a movie for the first time in the Argentinian film Últimos días de la víctima (1982). The story was totally rewritten by a U.S. screenwriter, Yolanda Finch (Yolande Turner), together with Feinmann, for a U.S. audience.[1]

gollark: It was just very low.
gollark: You did.
gollark: !wiki Macron
gollark: Basically bad Forth+Lisp.
gollark: It's an esolang.

References


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