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Saint Jack

Saint Jack
SaintJack.jpg
First edition cover (book) designed by Paul Bacon
Author Paul Theroux
Country United States
Language English
Genre Novel
Publisher Houghton Mifflin
Publication date
June 1973
Pages 247
Saint Jack
Directed by Peter Bogdanovich
Produced by Hugh M. Hefner
Edward L. Rissien
Written by Peter Bogdanovich
Howard Sackler
Paul Theroux
Starring Ben Gazzara
Denholm Elliott
George Lazenby
Cinematography Robby Müller
Edited by William C. Carruth
Distributed by New World Pictures
Release date
  • April 27, 1979 (1979-04-27)
Running time
112 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2 million

Saint Jack is a 1973 novel by Paul Theroux and a 1979 film of the same name. It tells the life of Jack Flowers, a pimp in Singapore. Feeling hopeless and undervalued, Jack tries to make money by setting up his own bordello, and clashes with Chinese triad members in the process.

Cybill Shepherd sued Playboy magazine after they published photos of her from The Last Picture Show. As part of the settlement, she got the rights to the novel Saint Jack, which she had wanted to make into a film ever since Orson Welles gave her a copy.

Ben Gazzara stars as Flowers in the film, directed by Peter Bogdanovich.

Saint Jack was shot entirely on location in various places in Singapore in May and June 1978. As of 2006, it is the only Hollywood film to have been shot on location in Singapore. Places featured in the film include the former Empress Place hawker centre (now demolished) and Bugis Street. The local authorities knew about the book, hence the foreign production crew did not tell them that they were adapting it, fearing that they would not be permitted to shoot the film. Instead, they created a fake synopsis for a film called "Jack Of Hearts", (what the director called "a cross between Love is a Many Splendored Thing and Pal Joey") and most of the Singaporeans involved in the production believed this was what they were making.

The film was banned in Singapore and Malaysia on January 17, 1980. Singapore banned it "largely due to concerns that there would be excessive edits required to the scenes of nudity and some coarse language before it could be shown to a general audience," and lifted the ban only in March 2006. It is now an M18-rated film.


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