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Film of the Day: Krofft Late Night
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MOVIE

House of Cards

No cover art for House of Cards
1968

Director and Cast Quickview

Directed by

John Guillermin

Starring

George Peppard · Inger Stevens · Orson Welles · Keith Michell · Perrette Pradier · Genevieve Cluny

Full cast & crew

Total grosses

UK total gross
United Kingdom Flag  £0
US total gross
United States Flag  $0
Global total gross
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25thframe.co.uk stats

Total views:
26
First viewed:
22nd Nov 2025
Last viewed:
30th Dec 2025
SELECT * FROM `news` WHERE `story` LIKE '%House of Cards%' ORDER BY `date` DESC LIMIT 5
News from around the web
A dynamite film, but a house of cards on nuclear reality  Lowy Institute Wed, 29th October 2025

Robin Wright: Netflix Paid Kevin Spacey More for 'House of Cards'  IndieWire Tue, 17th June 2025

Kevin Spacey’s Frank Underwood is back on Netflix. But there’s a catch  The Telegraph Wed, 16th April 2025

“After the Hunt” Is a Pleasurably Ludicrous House of Cards  The New Yorker Fri, 3rd October 2025

House of Cards Blu-ray  Blu-ray.com Sun, 9th November 2025

5 David Corenswet Roles to Catch Before He Stars as Superman  MovieMaker Magazine Wed, 10th September 2025

The days of local video shops where you would rent out a video/DVD after browsing the shelves for hours, and had a good chance of socialising is well and truly over, today if you want to rent a film it is usually via Netflix, Love films or your XBox 360/PS3.

Films for rental are usually cinema blockbusters or films which don't get a cinematic release do they go straight to DVD. This is now changing, in a move not dissimilar to the recent House of Cards series being available on Netflix first an independent British film called Pulp is going to debut on the XBox 360.

In recent years there has been a decline in smaller independent films getting decent distribution, and with these films not having shelf space and relying on digital content distribution this seems like a good idea. The music industry has been working on a similar model now for a while.

This could mean a surge in people making movies themselves with the possibility of people seeing their movies, which could in turn lead to a healthier film industry, win win all round really.