Philip Springer

Películas

The Boob Tube
Original Music Composer
In 'Live Action', young psychiatrist Henry Carstairs moves into an apartment building filled with lonely, sex starved women. This soap is interrupted several times by sexy ads.
Wicked, Wicked
Original Music Composer
A tongue-in-cheek psycho movie in "Duo-vision." The entire feature employs the split-screen technique used in parts of Brian De Palma's "Sisters" that same year. As a handyman at a seacoast hotel, Randolph Roberts wears a monster mask while he kills and dismembers women with blond hair. Tiffany Bolling is a singer, Scott Brady is a detective and Edd "Kookie" Burns is a lifeguard. The music is the original organ score for the silent film "Phantom of the Opera."
Dime que me amas, Junie Moon
Music
Atacada por un pretendiente, Junie Moon (Liza Minnelli) ha quedado con el rostro y un brazo marcados para siempre. Al ser dada de alta del hospital, ella alquila una casa en la que decide convivir con otros dos pacientes muy especiales: Warren Palmer (Robert Moore), un discapacitado con inclinaciones homosexuales, y un epiléptico de nombre Arthur (Ken Howard), quien ve en ella algo más que una simple compañera.
Callejón sin salida
Original Music Composer
Relata las acciones de un grupo de aventureros que intenta hallar un tesoro de oro perdido durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
I Sailed to Tahiti with an All Girl Crew
Music
It's silliness on the high seas as two sneaky sailors race across the South Pacific in this fast-paced and campy comedy. The fun begins when one bets the other $20,000 that he, with an all girl crew, be the first to Tahiti in a sailboat race. The other, not to be outdone, has a few monkeyshines up his sleeve and actually wins the race. The beaten bettor then makes the claim, that he can beat the victor to the mainland using a crew comprised of baboons. That is too much to resist for the other and the race is on.
New Faces
Songs
New Faces was a musical revue with songs and comedy skits tied together by a quirky plot. It ran on Broadway for nearly a year in 1952 and was then made into a motion picture in 1954. It helped jump start the careers of several young performers including Paul Lynde, Alice Ghostley, Eartha Kitt, Carol Lawrence, performer/writer Mel Brooks (as Melvin Brooks), and lyricist Sheldon Harnick. The film was basically a reproduction of the stage revue with a thin plot added. The plot involved a producer and performer (Ronny Graham) in financial trouble and is trying to stave off an angry creditor long enough to open his show. A wealthy Texan offers to help out, on the condition that his daughter be in the show.