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Mirrors (1985)
Character: Reverend Dahlstrom
An aspiring Midwestern ballerina (Marguerite Hickey) struggles in New York as the only jobs she can get are as chorus performers. Her personal life is equally dismal.
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A Midsummer Daydream (1955)
Character: Gambler
Tonight we are pleased to present the noted director John Brahm. Mr. Brahm has chosen for this evening a bright and amusing story by the Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist William Saroyan.
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The Magic Pear Tree (1968)
Character: Marquis
The famous lover Jean Navarro arrives at the castle of a marquis. This is a vulgar bon vivant who has been married to the young Chantelle for a short time. At lunch the Marquis falls asleep and Chantelle goes into the garden with Jean, shows him the roses, the stables and the summer house and shortly afterwards confesses her love to him. Jean asks her to do three things as proof of her affection: the tail feathers of her husband's favorite bird, the marquis's whiskers and one of his teeth.
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VD Attack Plan (1973)
Character: Contagion Corps Sergeant (Narrator)
Short animation dealing with the doubts young people have about venereal diseases.
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The Great Man (1956)
Character: Sid Moore
Joe Harris, preparing a eulogy for popular radio commentator Herb Fuller, finds that nobody has a good word to say about him.
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He Is My Brother (1975)
Character: Brother Dalton
Two shipwrecked boys become the focal point of a religious power struggle.
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High Velocity (1976)
Character: N/A
Ben Gazzara and Paul Winfield play Vietnam veterans turned mercenaries who are hired to rescue a kidnapped executive.
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A Touch of the Sun (1979)
Character: N/A
A bumbling US marine Captain is assigned to retrieve a space capsule from a despotic African ruler.
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Padella calibro 38 (1972)
Character: Billy Bronson / Kile Richards
The son of an aging gunfighter returns home with a shipment of confederate gold.
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Outlaw Motorcycles (1966)
Character: N/A
In 1965 actor and hopeful first time director Titus Moede befriended ‘Preacher’ of the outlaw motorcycle club the Coffin Cheaters while looking for a project. He soon realized that this was exactly the subject he had been looking for.
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Gene Kelly: Anatomy of a Dancer (2002)
Character: Self (archive footage)
American Masters Series. Documentary on Gene Kelly that gives insight into his dancing, how he formed a style (first "blue collar dancer") and developed different cinematique techniques, such as brilliantly shot dancing sequences.
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The Rock (1967)
Character: Self (uncredited)
A promotional two-part short for John Boorman's "Point Blank" shot on and around Alcatraz. Lee Marvin, Angie Dickinson and former inmate Joe Giles share their thoughts on the former prison.
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Twenty Years After (1944)
Character: (archive footage)
This short celebrates the 20th anniversary of MGM. Segments are shown from several early hits, then from a number of 1944 releases.
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The Thrill of Brazil (1946)
Character: Steve Farraugh
Steve, revue producer in Rio de Janeiro, is still in love with his ex-wife Vicki, his star Linda is in love with Steve and Tito is in love with Linda. Because of this they all get small problems.
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The Capture of Grizzly Adams (1982)
Character: Bert Woolman
A wilderness-loving man must clear himself of a wrongful murder charge and rescue his daughter who may be sent to an orphanage in this made-for-TV movie.
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A Woman for All Men (1975)
Character: Walter McCoy
Irascible and domineering millionaire Walter McCoy marries the beautiful, but shady and duplicitous Karen Petrie. Walter's son Steve automatically becomes smitten with Karen while both Walter's daughter Cynthia and loyal housekeeper Sarah suspect that something is up. This provokes a tangled web of deception, infidelity, and even murder.
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The Last Tycoon (1957)
Character: Lou Myrick
Based off the F. Scott Fitzgerald novel of the same title, a movie producer is slowly working himself to death.
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Tales from the Darkside (1990)
Character: Duncan Williams
A compilation of episodes from the classic '80s horror anthology TV series "Tales From The Darkside" for the VHS market.
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Hard Knocks (1979)
Character: Jed
A suspenseful and romantic tale of a young man, Guy Montgomery (Michael Christian), whose whole life thus far has been a desperate escape from a tragic and dangerous past. Idealistic as he tries to be, a series of unfortunate incidents in the neon jungle of Hollywood lead him deeper and deeper into the mire of its seamier side until one terrifying evening at the home of a famous actress (Josette Banzet) Guy gets into a fight with her husband and beats him up so badly that he thinks he has killed the man. Once again, Guy is running from his past toward an uncertain future.
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The Monitors (1969)
Character: General Blackwish
Earthlings chafe at the peace established by a benevolent alien race and set about to rebel.
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Requiem for a Heavyweight (1956)
Character: Maish Rennick
An over-the-hill heavyweight boxing champion who suffers from the ravages of years of head trauma is exploited by his manager, despite the efforts of a compassionate young woman who tries to help him recover his self-respect.
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The Quest (1976)
Character: H.H. Small
Eight years ago, Cheyenne Indians attacked the Baudine Family wagon and captured Morgan (Kurt Russell), whom they renamed Two Persons. Now Two Persons, raised in the ways of the Indians, has been reunited with his brother Quentin (Tim Matheson), a doctor and a stranger to frontier ways. Together the brothers set out in search of their sister Patricia, who was also captured and who Two Persons believes is still alive.
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Joe Dancer II: The Monkey Mission (1981)
Character: Stump Harris
Robert Blake's second (of three) "Joe Dancer" movies has the hard-boiled private investigator teaming up with a chimp named Gregor, his trainer (who also happens to be an expert thief), and an electronics genius of questionable repute to steal back a priceless vase looted from a family collection during World War II.
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Terror in the Sky (1971)
Character: Milton
On a transcontinental flight, the flight crew suffer from food poisoning and become incapacitated. Now it's up to one of the passengers to safely land the plane.
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Code of Vengeance (1985)
Character: Willis
A Vietnam veteran who has become a drifter helps a young, single mother avenge her brother's murder and finds himself the target of a gang of dope smugglers on the Mexican border.
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Target Risk (1975)
Character: Simon Cusack
A professional courier's girlfriend is abducted, and the kidnappers threaten to kill her unless the courier helps them fake a diamond robbery.
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No Time at All (1958)
Character: Marshall Keats
An airliner flying nonstop at night from Miami to New York fails to check in, then disappears from radar. We see how its disappearance affects people on the ground.
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Il re di poggioreale (1961)
Character: Di Gennaro
A charming rogue, the self-proclaimed leader of Naples, locks horns with an American Army general and a police inspector.
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The Last Precinct (1986)
Character: Butch
In this spoof of TV cop shows, which served as the pilot to the subsequent short-lived series, a bunch of bumbling misfits and rejects from the police academy, all assembled under a straitlaced but dimwitted captain, fumble their way to success cracking a drug ring run by a blind mobster.
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Demon and the Mummy (1976)
Character: Capt. Joe “Mad Dog” Siska
The second of two Kolchak: The Night Stalker compilation TV films. It combines two episodes of the Kolchak TV series, Demon In Lace (about a succubus who murders young men to maintain her immortality) and Legacy of Terror (about an Aztec cult that seeks to resurrect their god by murdering physically perfect people) and adds new narration by Darren McGavin.
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A Night Train to Terror (1973)
Character: Detective Hanratty
A woman is murdered during an overnight train ride and a veteran detective clashes with young P.I. on how they are going flush out the killer. They find themselves racing against the clock when a second body is discovered.
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The Losers (1963)
Character: Burgundy Smith
A couple of hard-drinking cardsharp drifters find themselves in the unlikely situation of having to play Cupid. A TV movie / episode of The Dick Powell Theatre.
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The Bastard (1978)
Character: Johnny Malcolm
Phillipe Charboneau is the illegitimate son of an English duke. When he travels from France to England to claim his inheritance, he incurs the wrath of his father's family and is forced to flee to America, where he becomes involved in the events leading to the American Revolution. (Episodes 1 and 2 of the Kent Chronicles miniseries.)
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Cannon (1971)
Character: Eddie
In this pilot film to the TV series, Cannon investigates the murder of a war buddy to clear the man's wife of suspicion in his death.
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Express to Terror (1979)
Character: Winfield Root
A gambling addict, mobsters, movie producers and others are plagued with murder while aboard a high-speed rail train. This pilot episode for the short-lived "Supertrain" series (which lasted just 9 episodes) was released to home video as a independent feature.
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The Devil's Rain (1975)
Character: Sheriff Owens
A Satanist cult leader is burnt alive by the local church. He vows to come back to hunt down and enslave every descendant of his congregation, by the power of the book of blood contracts, in which they sold their souls to the devil.
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Assault on the Wayne (1971)
Character: Orville Kelly
The U.S. submarine Anthony Wayne is underway for a top-secret mission. Onboard is a highly classified device that will give the Americans a decided nuclear advantage. The entire mission and the secret technology are threatened when the sub commander discovers his crew has been infiltrated by enemy agents. The commander is charged with trying to protect the device while ferreting out the enemy agents. Compounding matters is the state of the commander's physical and mental condition, which is being questioned by his crew.
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Nashville (1975)
Character: Mr. Green
The intersecting stories of twenty-four characters—from country star to wannabe to reporter to waitress—connect to the music business in Nashville, Tennessee.
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A Hole in the Head (1959)
Character: Jerry Marks
An impractical widower tries to hang onto his Miami hotel and his 12-year-old son.
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Warning Shot (1967)
Character: Sgt. Ed Musso
Hounded by the press for shooting a doctor, an ousted Los Angeles policeman works his own case.
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Shack Out on 101 (1955)
Character: George
A greasy spoon diner provides a base for a spy smuggling nuclear secrets.
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Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (1970)
Character: Winter Warlock (voice)
A postman, S.D. Kluger, decides to answer some of the most common questions about Santa Claus, and tells us about a baby named Kris who is raised by a family of elf toymakers named Kringle. When Kris grows up, he wants to deliver toys to the children of Sombertown. But its Mayor is too mean to let that happen. And to make things worse, the Winter Warlock lives between the Kringles and Sombertown.
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Touch of Evil (1958)
Character: Bartender (uncredited)
When a car bomb explodes on the American side of the U.S./Mexico border, Mexican drug enforcement agent Miguel Vargas begins his investigation, along with American police captain Hank Quinlan. When Vargas begins to suspect that Quinlan and his shady partner, Menzies, are planting evidence to frame an innocent man, his investigations into their possible corruption quickly put himself and his new bride, Susie, in jeopardy.
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Three Little Words (1950)
Character: Charlie Kope
Song-and-dance man Bert Kalmar can't continue his stage career after an injury, so he has to earn his money as a lyricist. By chance, he meets composer Harry Ruby and their first song is a hit. Ruby gets Kalmar to marry his former partner Jessie Brown, and Kalmar and Jessie prevent Ruby from getting married to the wrong girls. But due to the fact that Ruby has caused a backer's withdrawal for a Kalmar play, they end their professional relationship.
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That Midnight Kiss (1949)
Character: Artie Geoffrey Glenson
Opera singer Prudence Budell, overhears truck driver Johnny Donnetti singing opera, and persuades her opera company to give him a chance in her new opera. They fall in love, but on meeting his colleague Mary while visiting Johnny's work, Prudence becomes convinced Johnny is in love with her.
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Smith! (1969)
Character: Vince Heber
When the Indian Jimmyboy is accused of murder of a white man, he flees onto the ranch of Smith, who's well known for his tolerance for Indians, since he was raised by the old Indian Antoine. Smith helps Jimmyboy against the mean Sheriff and promises to speak for him in court, thus persuading him to surrender himself to the police.
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Imps* (1983)
Character: Charlie
Once Upon a Time in a mythical place called Hollywood, a long, long, long time ago in a galaxy not so very far away, a witty group of actors with 38 EMMY Nominations, 3 Academy Award nominations, and 8 Golden Globe nominations, along with 4 Playmates and a Penthouse Pet, came together in a burst of comic frenzy and created imps*.
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Black Moon Rising (1986)
Character: Iron John
An FBI free-lancer stashes a stolen Las Vegas-crime tape in a high-tech car stolen by someone else.
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Johnny Concho (1956)
Character: Barney Clark
In Johnny Concho, Frank Sinatra plays a man who goes from the town bully to town coward!
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The Scarface Mob (1959)
Character: Joe Fuselli
Story of how a group of incorruptible federal lawmen helped put 1920s' Chicago gangster Al Capone in prison.
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Texas Carnival (1951)
Character: Dan Sabinas
A Texas carnival showmen team is mistaken for a cattle baron and his sister.
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My Dear Secretary (1948)
Character: Ronnie Hastings
A budding young writer thinks it's her lucky day when she is chosen to be the new secretary for Owen Waterbury, famous novelist. She is soon disppointed, however, when he turns out to be an erratic, immature playboy. Opposites attract, of course, but not without sub-plots that touch on competitiveness within marriage and responsibility.
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The Glass Slipper (1955)
Character: Kovin
Musical adaptation of the story of Cinderella and her magical trip to the prince's ball.
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House on Greenapple Road (1970)
Character: Sgt. Charles Wilentz
A promiscuous housewife has been murdered and hardboiled detective Dan August has to find the motive...and the body.
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Jamaican Gold (1979)
Character: Meat Cleaver Stewart
A chance meeting leads two former college friends into a search for sunken treasure, a search which involves them with the double dealing Landers, supporter of their expedition treasures is discovered, but Landers traps them in an underwater cave.
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The Mechanic (1972)
Character: Harry McKenna
Arthur Bishop is a veteran hit man who, owing to his penchant for making his targets' deaths seem like accidents, thinks himself an artist. It's made him very rich, but as he hits middle age, he's so depressed and lonely that he takes on one of his victim's sons, Steve McKenna, as his apprentice. Arthur puts him through a rigorous training period and brings him on several hits. As Steven improves, Arthur worries that he'll discover who killed his father.
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Viva Max! (1969)
Character: General Lacomber
In order to prove his greatness to his unimpressed girlfriend, Mexican general Max takes a group of men across the border and recaptures the Alamo - international hijinks ensue!
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The Night of the Grizzly (1966)
Character: Jed Curry
Marshall "Big Jim" Cole turns in his badge and heads to Wyoming with his family in order to settle on some land left him by a relative. He faces opposition both from a neighbor who wants that land for his own sons, and from a grizzly bear nicknamed "Satan" who keeps killing Cole's livestock.
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Sex and the Married Woman (1977)
Character: Uncle June
A suburban housewife writes a novel based on her neighbors' sex lives. It becomes a runaway best seller, but causes no end of trouble in her marriage and her relationships with her neighbors.
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Sunburn (1979)
Character: Mark Elmes
A model and a private eye help a New York insurance investigator on a deadly case in Acapulco.
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Since You Went Away (1944)
Character: Lieutenant Solomon
In 1943, several people enter, re-enter, and exit the difficult life of a Midwestern family whose patriarch has been called up to war, leaving behind his wife and two teen daughters.
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The Internecine Project (1974)
Character: E.J. Farnsworth
Offered a job as a presidential adviser, a professor is forced to dispose of those who knew him when he was a spy.
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The Belle of New York (1952)
Character: Max Ferris
In squeaky-clean New York at the turn of the century, playboy Charlie Hill falls so much in love that he can walk on air. The object of his affections is beautiful Angela Bonfils, a mission house worker in the Bowery. He promises to reform his dissolute life, even trying to do an honest day's work.
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C'era una volta il West (1968)
Character: Sheriff
As the railroad builders advance unstoppably through the Arizona desert on their way to the sea, Jill arrives in the small town of Flagstone with the intention of starting a new life.
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Loving (1970)
Character: Edward
Brooks Wilson is in crisis. He is torn between his wife Selma and two daughters and his mistress Grace, and also between his career as a successful illustrator and his feeling that he might still produce something worthwhile.
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Bikini Beach (1964)
Character: Harvey Huntington Honeywagon
A millionaire sets out to prove his theory that his pet chimpanzee is as intelligent as the teenagers who hang out on the local beach, where he is intending to build a retirement home.
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The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956)
Character: Sgt. Caesar Gardella
Tom Rath is a suburban father and husband haunted by his memories of World War II, including a wartime romance with Italian village girl Maria, which resulted in an illegitimate son he's never seen. Pressed by his unhappy wife to get a higher-paying job, Rath goes to work as a public relations man for television network president Ralph Hopkins. Drawn into poisonous office politics, Tom finds he must choose his career or his family.
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Just Tell Me What You Want (1980)
Character: Seymour Berger
A television producer woman tries to let down her overbearing boyfriend who is her boss. She wants to marry with a young writer.
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80 Steps to Jonah (1969)
Character: Barney Glover
Wayne Newton stars as an accused thug hiding out at a camp for blind children.
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The Billion Dollar Threat (1979)
Character: Ely
A James Bondish superspy is assigned to thwart the devious plans of a master agent who is threatening to destroy the planet unless he is paid one billion dollars within 48 hours.
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Angels in the Outfield (1951)
Character: Fred Bayles
The short-tempered manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates mends his ways in return for a little divine assistance.
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Piranha (1978)
Character: Jack
When flesh-eating piranhas are accidently released into a summer resort's rivers, the guests become their next meal.
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Son of Flubber (1963)
Character: Alonzo P. Hawk
Beleaguered professor Ned Brainard has already run into a pile of misfortunes with his discovery of the super-elastic substance "Flubber." Now he hopes to have better luck with a gravity-busting derivative he's dubbed "Flubbergas." Ned's experiments, constantly hampered by government obstruction, earn the consternation of his wife, Betsy. But a game-winning modification to a football uniform may help Ned make the case for his fantastic new invention.
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Week-End at the Waldorf (1945)
Character: Oliver Webson
Anything can happen during a weekend at New York's Waldorf-Astoria: a glamorous movie star meets a world-weary war correspondent and mistakes him for a jewel thief; a soldier learns that without an operation he'll die and so looks for one last romance with a beautiful but ambitious stenographer; a cub reporter tries to get the goods on a shady man's dealing with a foreign potentate.
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The Dark (1979)
Character: Sherman 'Sherm' Moss
At night the Mangler stalks the streets of Los Angeles, killing and mutilating random victims. On the trail are a TV reporter, the father of one of the victims, and a police detective, but despite their efforts only the mysterious psychic DeRenzy knows what the killer is and how to stop it.
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The Killer Inside Me (1976)
Character: Chester Conway
Haunted by visions from his abusive childhood, Montana deputy sheriff Lou Ford gradually exhibits the signs of a homicidal schizophrenic.
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The Hucksters (1947)
Character: Buddy Hare
A World War II veteran wants to return to advertising on his own terms, but finds it difficult to be successful and maintain his integrity.
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Lost Angel (1943)
Character: Packy Roost
Alpha's been raised along scientific principles, and will make Mike Regan a great human interest story for his paper. But when his interview prompts Alpha to run away from the institute and ask him to show her some magic, Mike gets more responsibility than he bargained for. Especially since another story of his, one involving gangsters, has also come home to roost.
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The Perfect Furlough (1958)
Character: Harvey Franklin
A love-starved soldier stationed at an Arctic base wins a furlough in Paris, but a pretty, no-nonsense military psychologist is ordered to accompany him as chaperone to keep him out of trouble.
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Hit Lady (1974)
Character: Buddy McCormack
At a Texas barbecue, a pretty woman chats up a wealthy rancher, and soon they're off on a horseback ride. Before she shoots him on an isolated road, she gives him a minute to reflect on who he might have offended on his rise to the top. She's Angela de Vries, a contract killer based in L.A. She wants this to have been her last job; her contractor wants one more death, a national union leader, made to look like an accident. She starts her homework on this mark. Meanwhile, in her private life, she's in love with a budding photographer. Is there any way that she can get out of the game and have a full love life?
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Point Blank (1967)
Character: Yost
After being double-crossed and left for dead, a mysterious man named Walker single-mindedly tries to retrieve the rather inconsequential sum of money that was stolen from him.
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The Power and the Glory (1963)
Character: Wine Merchant
Based on Graham Greene's novel about a flawed but devoted priest in 1930s Mexico who attempts to perform his duties while eluding a police lieutenant determined to capture him.
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Cancel My Reservation (1972)
Character: Sheriff 'Houndtooth' Riley
Bob Hope is a stressed out talk show host who is sent on a vacation to Arizona on doctor's orders and has to play Sherlock Holmes with his wife, the lovely Eva Marie Saint, to solve a series of murders that has Bob as the prime suspect.
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Men of the Fighting Lady (1954)
Character: Lt. Cmdr. Dodson
A writer visits an aircraft carrier during the Korean war to learn more about it and the way it's run. He also gets to find out more about the Navy and Marine aviators themselves, their internal and external conflicts and dangers of their job.
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Stagecoach (1966)
Character: Luke Plummer
A group of unlikely travelling companions find themselves on the same stagecoach to Cheyenne. They include a drunken doctor, a bar girl who's been thrown out of town, a professional gambler, a travelling liquor salesman, a banker who has decided to embezzle money, a gun-slinger out for revenge and a young woman going to join her army captain husband. All have secrets but when they are set upon by an Indian war party and then a family of outlaws, they find they must all work together if they are to stay alive.
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Phone Call from a Stranger (1952)
Character: Eddie Hoke
Four strangers board a plane and become fast friends, but a catastrophic crash leaves only one survivor. He then sets off on a journey to discover who these people were, but ultimately discovers the devastating truth about himself.
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The Americanization of Emily (1964)
Character: Old Sailor
American sailor Charlie Madison falls for a pretty Englishwoman while trying to avoid a senseless and dangerous D-Day mission concocted by a deranged admiral.
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Best Friends (1982)
Character: Tom Babson
When a professional couple, who have lived and worked together for many years, finally decide to marry, their sudden betrothal causes many unexpected difficulties. They soon find that being married is often quite different from being "best friends."
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The Last Unicorn (1982)
Character: Captain Cully / Harpy (voice)
From a riddle-speaking butterfly, a unicorn learns that she is supposedly the last of her kind, all the others having been herded away by the Red Bull. The unicorn sets out to discover the truth behind the butterfly's words. She is eventually joined on her quest by Schmendrick, a second-rate magician, and Molly Grue, a now middle-aged woman who dreamed all her life of seeing a unicorn. Their journey leads them far from home, all the way to the castle of King Haggard.
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Man in the Middle (1964)
Character: Lieut. Winston
In a remote jungle outpost in the Far Eastern theater of World War II, a hotheaded American soldier murders an allied British sergeant in cold blood. Stalwart American Lt. Colonel Barney Adams (Mitchum) is dispatched to defend him in the ensuing court martial. But when Lt. Adams starts encountering roadblocks in his search for evidence, and his key witnesses start disappearing one after another, he soon realizes he's merely a pawn in a mysterious conspiracy that could extend to the highest levels of military power.
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L'uomo dagli occhi di ghiaccio (1971)
Character: Harry Davis
A state senator is murdered outside his home, and the police arrest a strange man described as having "icy eyes" for the crime. An Italian reporter finds a stripper who claims to have been an eyewitness to the assassination and saw the man with the icy eyes commit it. At his trial she testifies against him, and he's sentenced to death. However, the reporter soon begins to find holes in the stripper's story, and other circumstances arise which makes him believe that the wrong man may have been convicted
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I'll Give You a Million (1984)
Character: Duncan Williams
Wily millionaire engages his longtime acquaintance in a cat & mouse game ... by offering him one million dollars for his mortal soul.
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The Animals (1970)
Character: Pudge Elliott
A woman tracks down the three men who raped her, helped by an Apache. Traveling through the Old West to her new home, young schoolteacher Alice McAndrew is abducted by five outlaws headed by robber Pudge Elliott. The thugs rape Alice before leaving her for dead, but she is rescued by Chatto, an Apache chief. He restores her health and aids her in her bloodthirsty quest for revenge. With her sanity wavering, will Alice be able to find the men who tortured her?
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The Lucifer Complex (1978)
Character: U.S. Secretary of Defense
An intelligence agent discovers a Nazi plot to revive the Third Reich by using clones.
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A Piano for Mrs. Cimino (1982)
Character: Barney Fellman
An elderly widow must find meaning and activity in her life when her son suggests she is no longer capable of handling her own affairs.
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The Cockeyed Miracle (1946)
Character: Ben Griggs
A 60-ish Maine shipbuilder (Frank Morgan) and his 30-ish father (Keenan Wynn) provide for their family from the hereafter.
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Royal Wedding (1951)
Character: Irving Klinger / Edgar Klinger
Tom and Ellen are asked to perform as a dance team in England at the time of Princess Elizabeth's wedding. As brother and sister, each develops a British love interest, Ellen with Lord John Brindale and Tom with dancer Anne Ashmond.
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Easy to Wed (1946)
Character: Warren Haggerty
When a newspaper accuses a wealthy socialite of being a homewrecker, she files a multi-million-dollar libel lawsuit. The publication's frazzled head editor now must find a way to discredit her.
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Coach (1978)
Character: Fenton Granger
A young, blonde and beautiful woman is hired to coach a team of underachieving basketball players and against all odds, leads them to victory.
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Somewhere I'll Find You (1942)
Character: Tom Purdy
Journalist brothers feud over a woman they both fall for while covering World War II in the far east.
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Herbie Rides Again (1974)
Character: Alonzo Hawk
The living Volkswagen Beetle helps an old lady protect her home from a corrupt developer.
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Kiss Me, Kate (1953)
Character: Lippy
A pair of divorced actors are brought together to participate in a musical version of The Taming of the Shrew. Of course, the couple seem to act a great deal like the characters they play, and they must work together when mistaken identities get them mixed up with the mafia.
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The Deep Six (1958)
Character: Lt. Cmdr. Mike Edge
The conflict between duty and conscience is explored in the WWII drama The Deep Six. Alan Ladd stars as Naval gunnery officer Alec Austin, a Quaker whose sincere pacifist sentiments do not sit well with his crew members. When he refuses to fire upon an unidentified plane, the word spreads that Austin cannot be relied upon in battle (never mind that the plane turns out to be one of ours). To prove that he's worthy of command, Austin volunteers for a dangerous mission: the rescue of a group of US pilots on a Japanese-held island. The ubiquitous William Bendix costars as Frenchy Shapiro (!), Austin's Jewish petty officer and severest critic. If the film has a villain, it is Keenan Wynn as ambitious Lt. Commander Edge, who seems to despise anyone who isn't a mainline WASP.
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Skirts Ahoy! (1952)
Character: Keenan Wynn (uncredited)
Three young ladies sign up for some kind of training at a naval base. However, their greatest trouble isn't long marches or several weeks in a small boat, but their love life.
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The Clock (1945)
Character: The Drunk
A G.I. en route to Europe falls in love during a whirlwind two-day leave in New York City.
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Spara, Gringo, spara (1968)
Character: Major Charlie Doneghan
Chad Stark is offered his life and a nice ammount of dollars if he is to bring back the runaway son of mexican land-owner Gutierrez . This son, Fidel, teams up with an outlaw band lead by a former military man going by the name The Major. When Stark finds Fidel he is reintroduced to an old acquaintance which makes his job of returning the son a lot more difficult.
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Kind Lady (1951)
Character: Mr. Edwards
Mary Herries has a passion for art and fine furniture. Even though she is getting on in years, she enjoys being around these priceless articles. One day she meets a strange young painter named Elcott, who uses his painting skill to enter into her life. Little does she expect that his only interest in Mary is to covet everything she has.
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The Absent-Minded Professor (1961)
Character: Alonzo P. Hawk
Bumbling professor Ned Brainard accidentally invents flying rubber, or "Flubber", an incredible material that gains energy every time it strikes a hard surface. It allows for the invention of shoes that can allow jumps of amazing heights and enables a modified Model-T to fly. Unfortunately, no one is interested in the material except for Alonzo Hawk, a corrupt businessman who wants to steal the material for himself.
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Fearless Fagan (1952)
Character: Sgt. Kellwin
A young man brings his pet lion with him when he's drafted into the U.S. Army.
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The Young Lawyers (1969)
Character: Frank Barron
Attorney Michael Cannon leaves his Boston law firm to become director of the Neighborhood Law Office, where he guides three law students on a case involving two visiting musicians accused of robbing and beating up a cab driver. TV-pilot that was an ABC Movie of the Week in October of 1969 and then became a TV-series as part of the 1970-71 season.
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Hijack! (1973)
Character: Donny McDonald
Two truck drivers are hired to transport a top-secret cargo from New York to Houston. Along the way they must evade attempts by a terrorist group to hijack the material.
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B.F.'s Daughter (1948)
Character: Martin Delwyn 'Marty' Ainsley
Wealthy Polly Fulton marries a progressive scholar whose attitudes toward capitalism and acquired wealth puts their marriage in jeopardy.
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The Legend of Earl Durand (1974)
Character: Col. Nightingale
The Legend Of Earl Durand was the story of a young child whose family lived near DuBois, Wyoming and made Earl live in a hut in the wild because they thought he had a contagious disease. When the local Aboriginal people discovered his plight, they took him under their wing so he grew up as a sort of wild man, completely able to live off the land. He was known as the "Robin Hood" of the West because he hunted game on Federal land which was very illegal and gave the meat to the poor.
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The War Wagon (1967)
Character: Wes Fletcher
An ex-con seeks revenge on the man who put him in prison by planning a robbery of the latter's stagecoach, which is transporting gold. He enlists the help of a partner, who could be working for his nemesis.
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The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown (1957)
Character: Dandy
When beautiful blonde movie star Laurel Stevens is kidnapped on the verge of the premiere of her film “The Kidnapped Bride”, everyone thinks it's a publicity stunt. It's not.
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That's Entertainment, Part II (1976)
Character: (archive footage)
Gene Kelly and Fred Astaire present more golden moments from the MGM film library, this time including comedy and drama as well as classic musical numbers.
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Mission to Glory: A True Story (1977)
Character: Father at Trading Mission
Father Kino , a 17th-century Jesuit missionary, dedicated his life to helping Native Americans in the Southwest by teaching them agricultural skills as well as building missions and spreading Christianity. An explorer, astronomer and map maker, Father Kino surmounted numerous challenges as he journeyed through California, Arizona and Mexico.
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The Long, Long Trailer (1954)
Character: Policeman
A newly wed couple, Tacy and Nicky, travel in a trailer for their honeymoon. The journey is a humorous one that could end up destroying their marriage.
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Mackenna's Gold (1969)
Character: Sanchez
A bandit kidnaps a Marshal who has seen a map showing a gold vein on Indian lands, but other groups are looking for it too, while the Apache try to keep the secret location undisturbed.
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The Three Musketeers (1948)
Character: Planchet
Athletic adaptation of Alexandre Dumas' classic adventure about the king's musketeers and their mission to protect France.
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Without Love (1945)
Character: Quentin Ladd
In World War II Washington DC, scientist Pat Jamieson's assistant, Jamie Rowan, enters a loveless marriage with him. Struggles bring them closer together.
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For Me and My Gal (1942)
Character: Eddie Milton (uncredited)
Two vaudeville performers fall in love, but find their relationship tested by the arrival of WWI.
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Promise Her Anything (1966)
Character: Angelo Carelli
A widowed mother decides to go after the child psychologist she works for because she thinks he'll be able to provide for her toddler, the catch is her employer doesn't know about her son and he doesn't particularly care for children despite his profession.
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Sky Full of Moon (1952)
Character: Al
A cowboy seeks fame and fortune in Las Vegas where he meets a girl working in a casino.
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It's a Big Country (1951)
Character: Michael Fisher
Comprised of eight unrelated episodes of inconsistent quality, this anthology piece of American propaganda features some of MGM Studios' best directors, screenwriters and actors; it is narrated by Louis Calhern. Stories are framed by the lecture of a university professor. In one tale a Boston resident becomes angry when the census forgets to record her presence. Another sketch chronicles the achievements of African Americans while still another pays tongue-in-cheek tribute to Texas.
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The Manipulator (1971)
Character: Old Charlie
An insane Hollywood makeup artist kidnaps a woman and keeps her prisoner in a prop-filled warehouse.
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No Leave, No Love (1946)
Character: Slinky
A soldier returns with his pal from fighting in the Pacific during World War II only to discover his fiancee has married someone else. However, he falls in love with a woman at the hotel at which he is staying.
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Mom, the Wolfman and Me (1980)
Character: Grandpa Bergman
Concerned that her feminist mom Deborah is going to stay single, Jenny Bergman plays matchmaker. She arranges a date between mom and unemployed Theo Marker, Irish Wolfhound owner, doing everything to get keep them together.
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Marriage Is a Private Affair (1944)
Character: Maj. Bob Wilton
Theo has had many boyfriends who wanted to marry her. Since her mother, Mrs. Selworth, has been married many times, Theo is unsure of commitment. Without much thought, she finally accepts the proposal of Air Corps Lieutenant Tom West. After the honeymoon, Tom's father dies and Tom goes into the defense industry. When Theo has a baby, she hates the idea of being matronly and wants to be the old party girl. The problem is that her husband is working constantly. She looks to her friends, who are having their own problems, and to her old flame Captain Lancing. To decide on what she wants to do with her baby and her life, Theo must grow up.
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Welcome to Hard Times (1967)
Character: Zar
A sociopathic stranger all but destroys a small hardscrabble town but the 'mayor' convinces its survivors to stay and rebuild.
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Pretty Maids All in a Row (1971)
Character: Chief John Poldaski
At Oceanfront High School, female students are being targeted by an unknown serial killer. Meanwhile, a married teacher hides his flings with nubile students, and an awkward male is frustrated by the plethora of uninhibited freewheeling young girls.
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Desperate Search (1952)
Character: Brandy
A man (Howard Keel), his wife (Jane Greer) and his famous-aviator ex-wife (Patricia Medina) search for their two children lost with a cougar.
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See Here, Private Hargrove (1944)
Character: Pvt. Mulvehill
Journalist Marion Hargrove enters the Army intending to supplement his income by writing about his training experiences. He muddles through basic training at Fort Bragg with the self-serving help of a couple of buddies intent on cutting themselves in on that extra income.
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Naples '44 (2016)
Character: Self
A British Intelligence Officer in Naples at the end of World War II: Norman Lewis's acknowledged masterpiece about a war-torn city and its unforgettable humanity.
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Stage to Thunder Rock (1964)
Character: Ross Sawyer
An aging sheriff is put in the position of having to arrest the outlaw father and two sons with whom he was raised.
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Code Two (1953)
Character: Police Sgt. Jumbo Culdane
Three young men train to become motorcycle cops.
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Snowball Express (1972)
Character: Martin Ridgeway
When John Baxter inherits a ski resort in the Rocky Mountains, he quits his job in New York and moves the family west to run it. Only to find that the place is a wreck. But together they decide to try to fix it up and run it. But Martin Ridgeway, who wants the property, does everything he can to ensure it will fail.
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The Marauders (1955)
Character: Hook
A poor homesteader fights back when he's targeted for extinction by a powerful rancher and his gang of hired thugs.
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Love That Brute (1950)
Character: Bugsy Welch
The story of a crude gangster hopelessly falling for a sweet young city government employee.
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The Shaggy D.A. (1976)
Character: John Slade
Wilby Daniels, a successful lawyer running for District Attorney, suddenly finds himself being transformed into an English sheepdog. Somehow he has to keep his change a secret and find just what is causing it, all the while eluding the local dog catcher.
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Laserblast (1978)
Character: Colonel Farley
Happy go-lucky teen Billy Duncan discovers an otherworldly laser gun in the southern California desert, making him the target of a pair of aliens who had recently executed its previous owner.
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Finian's Rainbow (1968)
Character: Senator Billboard Rawkins
An Irish immigrant and his daughter arrive in Kentucky with a magical piece of gold that alters the course of several lives, including those of a struggling farmer and an African American community facing persecution from a bigoted politician.
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Annie Get Your Gun (1950)
Character: Charlie Davenport
Gunslinger Annie Oakley romances fellow sharpshooter Frank Butler as they travel with Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.
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Joe Butterfly (1957)
Character: Harold Hathaway
The staff of "Yank" magazine are among the first American troops into Tokyo after the Japanese surrender. Their mission: produce an issue of the magazine...in three days. To accomplish the seeming impossible, they reluctantly enlist the aid of black marketeer and arch-conniver Joe Butterfly, who sets them up in a palatial private mansion, complete with lovely daughter -- strictly against regulations. How much trouble can our heroes talk their way out of?
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Nightmare in the Sun (1965)
Character: Junk dealer
A hitchhiker sleeps with a rancher's wife and is hunted by the sheriff for her murder.
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Neptune's Daughter (1949)
Character: Joe Backett
Scatterbrained Betty Barrett mistakes masseur Jack Spratt for Jose O'Rourke, the captain of the South American polo team. Spratt goes along with the charade, but the situation becomes more complicated when they fall in love. Meanwhile, Betty's sensible older sister Eve fears Betty's heart will be broken when Jose returns to South America. She arranges to meet with the real O'Rourke and love soon blossoms between them as well.
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The Patsy (1964)
Character: Harry Silver
When a star comedian dies, his comedy team decides to train a 'nobody' to play the Star in a big TV show (a Patsy). But the man chosen, bellboy Stanley Belt (Lewis), can't do anything right. The TV show is getting closer, and Stanley is getting worse.
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The Great Race (1965)
Character: Hezekiah
Professional daredevil and white-suited hero, The Great Leslie, convinces turn-of-the-century auto makers that a race from New York to Paris (westward across America, the Bering Straight and Russia) will help to promote automobile sales. Leslie's arch-rival, the mustached and black-attired Professor Fate vows to beat Leslie to the finish line in a car of Fate's own invention.
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Battle Circus (1953)
Character: Sgt. Orvil Statt
A young Army nurse, Lt Ruth McGara, newly assigned to the 66th MASH during the Korean War, attracts the sexual attention of the unit's commander Dr. (MAJ) Jed Webbe. Webbe, who has a drinking problem, at first wants a "no strings" relationship. McGara is warned by the other nurses of Webbe's womanizing ways. Despite these initial handicaps, their love flourishes against a background of war, enemy attacks, death and injury. The relationship deepens and uplifts both characters.
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The Glove (1979)
Character: Bill Schwartz
In this actioner, a bounty hunter is assigned to bring back an enormous and angry ex-convict who wears a deadly glove made of leather and steel. Rock'em sock'em mayhem ensues.
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Call to Glory (1984)
Character: Carl Sarnac
Colonel Raynor Sarnac has to balance his family and his duty as head of a flight group facing the political tensions of the early 60's. Actual historical events are part of various stories as are the activities of three active children.
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Don't Go Near the Water (1957)
Character: Gordon Ripwell
Madison Avenue-trained Navy men handle public relations on a South Pacific island during World War II.
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Ziegfeld Follies (1945)
Character: Caller (segment "Number Please")
The late, great impresario Florenz Ziegfeld looks down from heaven and ordains a new revue in his grand old style.
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Run Like a Thief (1967)
Character: Willy Gore
The theft of a fortune in diamonds and the attempt by soldier of fortune Johnny Dent to outwit his pursuers who would stop at nothing to get their hands on the treasure forms the story-line. The chase reaches across the continent as Dent eludes the diamond syndicate police, a ruthless gangster, and a scheming girl in his attempt to escape.
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The Crowded Sky (1960)
Character: Nick Hyland
When Navy pilot Dale Heath takes off, he doesn't expect his navigational equipment to fail and must adapt when it goes out along with his radio. Heading straight for a commercial jet piloted by Dick Barnett, whose plane is full of passengers, Heath can't tell which way to turn in order to avoid a catastrophe.
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Prime Risk (1985)
Character: Dr. Lasser
While siphoning bank funds, computer-wise lovers spot a plot to sink the Federal Reserve.
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Wavelength (1983)
Character: Dan
Two young lovers learn that a small group of child-like space aliens are marooned on Earth and are being held prisoner at a top secret military facility. The couple then decide to liberate the extraterrestrial castaways and help them make a rendezvous with a rescue ship sent from the alien home planet.
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Northwest Rangers (1942)
Character: 'Slip' O'Mara
Boyhood friends grow up into different professions: one a dedicated Canadian Mountie, the other a notorious gambler.
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The Naked Hills (1956)
Character: Sam Wilkins
Tracy Powell, an Indiana farmer, gets the gold fever and heads for Stockton, California in 1849. There, he abandons his first partner, Bert Killian, and teams up with Sam Wilkins, a claim jumper employed by Willis Haver. Six years later, Powell returns to Indiana and his sweetheart, Julie. They marry and he tries farming again but, on the night their son is born, he takes off again searching for gold. This time he heads for the hills with an inveterate prospector, Jimmo McCann. A decade later, the two are still hunting for their big strike when McCann is killed in an accident. Powell returns home with news of a big strike but the deserted Julie will have nothing to do with him. His friend Killian will not believe him but Haver, now a banker gives him a small loan and then beats him out of his claim. Many years pass before he comes home, now sixty-years-old, and this time, his wife and son open their home to him. But he vows to go prospecting come next spring.
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Hysterical (1982)
Character: Old Fisherman
Frederic Lansing is a writer who hopes to find inspiration while vacationing in Hellview, Oregon; however, the lighthouse in which he's staying is haunted by the ghost of Venetia, who had killed herself 100 years ago and now wants to use Lansing as a vessel for her dead husband, Captain Howdy. When Howdy's ghost starts killing people, two bumbling scientists are brought in to investigate the history of the lighthouse and solve the case.
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Honeymoon Hotel (1964)
Character: Mr. Sampson
A man left at the alter goes on his honeymoon trip anyway, taking his best man along instead.
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Running Wild (1955)
Character: Ken Osanger
To get evidence against a crooked garage owner, a rookie cop masquerades as a hard case who wants a job as a mechanic.
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Orca (1977)
Character: Novak
After witnessing the killing of his mate and offspring at the hands of a reckless Irish captain, a vengeful killer whale rampages through the fisherman's Newfoundland harbor. Under pressure from the villagers, the captain, a female marine biologist and an Indigenous tribalist venture after the great beast, who will meet them on its own turf.
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Quella carogna dell'ispettore Sterling (1968)
Character: Inspector Donald
Henry Silva is the police inspector Sterling who is devastated when a gang of robbers kill his son. He then becomes accused of having killed a police informer and is kicked out of the police department. His life seems ruined. To clear his name he will have to take the law into his own hands, and excitement will ensue!
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Song of the Thin Man (1947)
Character: Clarence "Clinker" Krause
Society sleuths Nick and Nora Charles investigate a murder in a jazz club.
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