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Mirror, Mirror Off the Wall (1969)
Character: Linkoff
A down-on-his-luck writer publishes a best-selling, but lurid novel under a pseudonym and discovers that his fictional personae has suddenly appeared and taken on a life of his own.
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Eggs (1971)
Character: (voice)
The spirits of life and death go for a drive in this darkly humorous fantasia featuring an original score by Quincy Jones.
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Hey! Hey! USA (1938)
Character: Tony Ricardo
While working as a porter Benjamin Twists mistakenly ends up on a cruise ship heading for the USA. Upon landing on the American coast Twist takes up work as a professor.
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The Tiger Makes Out (1967)
Character: Mr. Ratner
During a typically disaster-filled day, Ben Harris, an angry and frustrated bachelor mailman living in a cluttered Greenwich Village basement, learns he has been paying rent to a woman who hasn't owned his building in 6 years. No longer able to endure the injustices of society, he decides to activate the ferocious tiger within himself by abducting a helpless female and dragging her back to his lair.
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All American Drawback (1935)
Character: Game Announcer
The Dean and Board of Flunk Well College are arguing with its football coach, Bergen, about the team's star player, Charlie McCarthy, who is the only reason the team is a winning one, but who isn't doing well academically and could be pulled from the team if his grades and behavior don't improve. In other words, Charlie is a dummy in more ways than one. Beyond other problems Coach Bergen has with Charlie concerning the coach's girlfriend Joan, Coach Bergen has to get Charlie prepared to pass an exam administered by the Dean. Instead of cheating like he usually does, Charlie has his own way of dealing with the exam.
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Just like a Woman (1939)
Character: Pedro
A group of private detectives working for a jeweler pursue a gang of thieves in Argentina.
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Spring Handicap (1937)
Character: Amos
A wife tries to prevent her husband, a miner, from gambling away the money he receives as an inheritance.
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The Path of Glory (1934)
Character: Ginsberg
Comedy about two Ruritanian countries who declare war on each other with the mutual intention of losing. Political satire that might have been Britain’s answer to Duck Soup.
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Romance in Rhythm (1934)
Character: Mollari
In this British crime drama, a nightclub chorine jilts her old boyfriend, a musician, in favor of a new fiancé. Not long after, her new love is murdered. Although the prime suspect is the musician, he is not the guilty party.
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Bye-Gones (1933)
Character: N/A
A Ruth Etting musical short. The songs - "Smiles", "I'll Follow You", "My Melancholy Baby" and "When My Baby Smiles at Me".
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That Goes Double (1933)
Character: Manny Stein
Complications ensue when a singer discovers he has a double in this musical short film.
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The Sky’s the Limit (1937)
Character: "Ballyhoo" Bangs
Romance of an absent minded designer of planes and a famous singer to whom he tries to sell his friends' songs.
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The Price (1971)
Character: Gregory Solomon
After the Great Depression, Victor Franz gave up going to college to support his father. After 30 years, Victor returns to sell his parents’ estate. His wife, Esther, his brother, Walter, and a canny furniture dealer have their own agendas. Victor must finally deal with his sacrifice.
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Crime Over London (1936)
Character: Sniffy
With the police on their tail, a gang of New York criminals decided to relocate to London where they plan a major robbery on a department store.
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Four Boys and a Gun (1957)
Character: Television man
The moving story of four young men struggling against overwhelming odds to remain honest. When their crooked employer shorts their earnings; they turn to crime, their first theft ending in tragedy.
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Let's Make Love (1960)
Character: Oliver Burton
When billionaire Jean-Marc Clement learns that he is to be satirized in an off-Broadway revue, he passes himself off as an actor playing him in order to get closer to the beautiful star of the show, Amanda Dell.
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St. Martin's Lane (1938)
Character: Hackett
On the sidewalks of the London theater district the buskers (street performers) earn enough coins for a cheap room. Charles, who recites dramatic monologues, sees that a young pickpocket, Libby, also has a talent for dancing and adds her to his act. Harley, the theater patron who never knew Libby took his gold cigarette case, is impressed by Libby's dancing and invites her to bring Charles and the other buskers in his group to an after-the-play party. Libby comes alone. A theatrical career is launched.
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The Saint in London (1939)
Character: Dugan
Suave soldier of fortune Simon Templer gets mixed up with a gang of counterfeiters who've murdered and robbed an European count of 1,000,000 pounds. He is aided reluctantly by Scotland Yard inspector Teal, who's convinced that Templar himself pulled off the heist, and less reluctantly by light-fingered Dugan and dizzy socialite Penny Parker.
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Once Upon a Horse... (1958)
Character: Bruno de Gruen
Two zany cowboys steal a herd of cattle only to discover it costs more to feed them than they are worth.
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A Girl Must Live (1939)
Character: Joe Gold
A run-away school-girl falls among chorus girls planning to marry into the nobility.
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The Gang's All Here (1939)
Character: Beretti
John Forrest is anticipating a quiet retirement spent penning detective fiction when he learns that a priceless collection of jewels belonging to a foreign potentate, Prince Homouska, has just vanished from the safekeeping of the Stamford Assurance Company. Aided by his butler, his Cockney assistant and his (initially) unwilling wife, Forrest sets out on the trail of the thieves.
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The Queen's Affair (1934)
Character: Manager
Poor New York shop girl Nadina receives the unexpected news that she is next in line to be queen of an Eastern European country. On her arrival in Ruritania, a revolution is in progress, and only minutes before her coronation, Nadina is forced into exile. She flees to Paris with her nurse, and then travels on to Switzerland. There Nadina encounters the Ruritanian revolutionary leader Carl, recuperating from the trials of revolution, and the couple unexpectedly fall in love. When the revolution collapses in Ruritania, they return and marry, thus forming a constitutional monarchy supported by all the people.
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Rendezvous (1935)
Character: German-Speaking Bellhop (uncredited)
A decoding expert tangles with enemy spies.
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Move (1970)
Character: Doorman
A young playwright who writes porno novels to overcome a writer's block, lives the fantasies of one of his books, while trying to move with his wife from one apartment into a larger one.
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It's Always Fair Weather (1955)
Character: Tim
Three World War II buddies promise to meet at a specified place and time 10 years after the war. They keep their word only to discover how far apart they've grown. But the reunion sparks memories of youthful dreams that haven't been fulfilled -- and slowly, the three men reevaluate their lives and try to find a way to renew their friendship.
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Deep in My Heart (1954)
Character: Lazar Berrison, Sr.
Biographic movie about the American composer Sigmund Romberg.
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Knock on Wood (1954)
Character: Marty Brown
Ventriloquist Jerry Morgan has failed with another love affair. The reason: when the relationship reaches the point when it is time to discuss marriage, his two dolls become mean and jealous. Morgan's dollmaker Papinek is a member of a spy ring who has stolen the secret plans for the top-secret Lafayette airplane. Since Morgan is leaving for Zurich the same night, he decides to hide the secret plan in the heads of the dolls.
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