The Stud | |
Director: | Quentin Masters |
Producer: | Ron Kass |
Starring: | Joan Collins Oliver Tobias Sue Lloyd Walter Gotell |
Cinematography: | Peter Hannan |
Music: | Biddu (original score) Various (soundtrack) |
Studio: | Artoc Films Stud Productions |
Distributor: | Brent Walker Film Distributing |
Runtime: | 95 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $600,000 |
Gross: | $20 million |
The Stud is a 1978 British drama film directed by Quentin Masters and starring Joan Collins and Oliver Tobias. It is based on the 1969 novel of the same name by Collins's younger sister Jackie Collins.
Fontaine Khaled (Joan Collins) is the London wife of a wealthy Arab businessman. She spends his money on her nightclub, Hobo, and her rather hedonistic partying lifestyle. She hires a handsome manager, Tony (Oliver Tobias), to run her club, but it is understood that his job security is dependent on his satisfying her nymphomaniac demands. Tony loses interest in Fontaine, as she treats him like a plaything, and turns his attention to her young stepdaughter Alexandra Khaled (Emma Jacobs), who uses him to get back at Fontaine after she discovers a video tape of Fontaine and Tony having sex in the Khaleds' private elevator, cheating on her father. Fontaine then dumps Tony and is divorced by her husband for adultery.
Additional footage involving disco dancing was added for the US release. This footage involved members of the UK dance troupe Legs & Co., appearing (uncredited) as discotheque patrons.
A successful soundtrack album was released on Ronco Records to tie-in with the film. The album contained twenty tracks, including original material penned by Biddu specifically for the film, as well as a number of major British chart hits which were licensed for use in the film. The majority of the tracks were disco flavoured, although some non-disco tracks were also included. The album rose to number 2 on the UK albums chart, kept off the top spot by the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack album.[2]
Soundtrack album track list:
Side one
Side two
Made for $600,000, the film grossed over $20,000,000 internationally.[3] The film was one of the most popular movies of 1978 at the British box office.[4] It did not perform well in the United States, which Brent Walker blamed on American International Pictures' handling of the film, including the "slapdash dubbing" of the British lead actors' voices.[5]
The film helped to revitalise Joan Collins's career. The Stud and its sequel The Bitch helped her to be cast as Alexis Colby in Dynasty.[6] However, Tobias later claimed that his part in the film led to typecasting and ruined his career.