2024-07-03
Mixture of farce and tragedy about the romance of a shipbuilder, his wife and a headwaiter. Charles Boyer, Jean Arthur. Cesare: Leo Carrillo. Bruce: Colin Clive. Michael: Ivan Lebedeff. Norton: George Meeker. Inspector: Georges Renavent. Directed by Frank Borzage.
Thackeray's "Vanity Fair," about the loves of a woman in Regency England. Miriam Hopkins, Frances Dee, Cedric Hardwicke, Billie Burke. Historically notable as the first feature in three-strip Technicolor. Directed by Rouben Mamoulian.
Sequel in which a fugitive cowboy, falsely accused of murder and robbery, is pursued by his uncle, a lawman. Tim McCoy, Joan Barclay, Ted Adams, Forrest Taylor.
Gene Autry sings and fights as he joins a rodeo show and helps protect it from a rival outfit. Smiley Burnette, Virginia Grey, Lucien Littlefield, Morgan Conway, Claire DuBrey.
Religious Programming.
Sheriff Gene Autry reluctantly arrests his pal for the murder of the man's father, then searches for the real killer. Pat Buttram, Jo Dennison, Don Beddoe, James Millican, Don Kay Reynolds.
A self-made man who gets engaged to a snooty heiress from a family too stuffy and set in their ways to understand his unorthodox take on life, rethinks his decision after meeting her spirited, rebellious sister.
Mixture of farce and tragedy about the romance of a shipbuilder, his wife and a headwaiter. Charles Boyer, Jean Arthur. Cesare: Leo Carrillo. Bruce: Colin Clive. Michael: Ivan Lebedeff. Norton: George Meeker. Inspector: Georges Renavent. Directed by Frank Borzage.
Howard Hawks' version of the A.B. Guthrie novel about Kentucky frontiersmen taking a keelboat trip up the Missouri River in the 1830s and running into some Indian trouble along the way.
A young drifter finds trouble on a large ranch. Well-acted.
A cavalry captain battles Apaches and a treacherous corporal.
Three English-speakers forced to share a cramped apartment during the housing shortage of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics find themselves involved in a wacky series of high jinks and romantic misunderstandings. Cary Grant's final film role.
A Florida boy lends a hand to an injured dolphin, and the supersmart sea creature returns the favor and lends a fin to the lad when he's threatened by a school of sharks. The film was adapted into a half-hour TV series that aired from 1964 to '68. Luke Halpin, as the youngster, was the only star of the film who made the transition to the small screen.