The first feature-length film to be released in its entirety in the US was the 69-minute fantasy/horror epic Dante's Inferno (1911, It.) (aka L’Inferno), inspired by Dante's 14th century poem The Divine Comedy. It opened in New York on December 10, 1911 at Gane’s Manhattan Theatre. It was made by three directors Francesco Bertolini, Giuseppe de Liguoro, and Adolfo Padovan, took two years to make, and cost over $180,000. It was also the first non-erotic film to feature full-frontal male nudity - which wouldn't reappear again until Women in Love (1969, UK).