The Noah

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The Noah is an experimental feature film directed by Daniel Bourla. Robert Strauss, in his final film performance, plays an American soldier who appears to be the sole survivor of a nuclear war. He arrives on a deserted island and tries to maintain a normal existence, but in his isolation he creates an imaginary world complete with two companions (played in off-screen voice performances by Geoffrey Holder and Sally Kirkland). The film was shot in Puerto Rico in 1968, but was not screened until 1975; it was never theatrically released. The Noah remained unseen until 1997, when it was featured on a film appreciation program broadcast by the television station operated by the City University of New York. A 2005 article on Film Threat and a follow-up interview on the same site with Bourla encouraged the filmmaker to resurrect his work. In 2006, The Noah had its DVD debut.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Cineaste coverage [1]

[edit] External links

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