Femme Fatales was an American men's magazine focusing on film and television actresses. It was in circulation between 1992 and 2008. Femme Fatales was founded by Frederick S. Clarke in the summer of 1992, as the sister publication to his science fiction film magazine Cinefantastique. Published by Clarke, it was originally edited by pin-up photography collector and expert Bill George. Cinefantastique contributor Dan Cziraky joined the staff as Associate Editor several months prior to its launch. It focused on science-fiction, fantasy, and horror actresses, from B-movies to Academy Award winners, featuring provocative non-nude photography pictorials, alongside extensive career interviews. It was unique in that it encouraged contributions from the actresses themselves, and featured articles penned by "scream queens" Brinke Stevens, Tina-Desiree Berg and Debbie Rochon, amongst others. Interviews with filmmakers that helped bolster the "scream queen" market, such as Andy Sidaris and Fred Olen Ray, were also featured. It was a publishing success, at one time producing an issue every three weeks. Cziraky left the magazine in 1994 over creative differences with George, and was replaced as Associate Editor by Rochon. More information...
According to PR-model, femmefatales.com is ranked 351,668th in multilingual Wikipedia, in particular this website is ranked 39,202nd in Japanese Wikipedia.
The website is placed before hatoyama.gr.jp and after fcir.org in the BestRef global ranking of the most important sources of Wikipedia.