They wander through sets half-swallowed by sand. A caravan of plaster palm trees leans like tired dancers. The air tastes of celluloid and dust, and every footstep writes a negative that will never be developed. In the distance, the Sahara hums with the low, persistent sound of an old motor—maybe a projector still spinning somewhere beneath the dunes, projecting nothing but its own shadow. Night arrives with a slow clapperboard snap. Stars project onto peeling backdrops; constellations form familiar faces—directors, extras, lovers—each a cameo in the sky’s second-unit footage.
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By 1998, D'Amato released Sahara , which was retitled for various international DVD markets as . Despite the branding, the film is not a direct narrative sequel: Joe D'Amato - MUBI
: Much of the production for this installment took place in Tunisia . Technical Breakdown Sahara (Video 1998)