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Lucky to Me (1939)
Character: Butterworth
Lucky to Me is a 1939 British musical comedy film directed by Thomas Bentley and starring Stanley Lupino, Phyllis Brooks and Barbara Blair. It was based on Lupino's own 1928 stage show So This is Love which he had co-written with Arthur Rigby. The film was made by ABPC at its Elstree Studios. It was the last film of Lupino who had made a string of successful musical comedies during the Thirties.
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Chance of a Lifetime (1950)
Character: Morris
The workers in a small plough factory take over the firm, but when a large order falls through, the old management come back to help out.
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Educated Evans (1936)
Character: Arthur Hackitt
Cockney racing tipster Evans (Miller) is asked by a nouveau riche and socially aspirant couple to train a racehorse they have bought.
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Quiet, Please (1938)
Character: Holloway
“Comedy of a little man forced by chance into a big jewel robbery.” - BFI.
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The Echo Murders (1945)
Character: James Duncan (as Julian Mitchell)
Detective Sexton Blake takes on Nazi spies while solving a series of crimes.
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Double Exposures (1937)
Character: Hector Rodman
A industrialist has a row with his son, who leaves home. Meanwhile, both his assistant and solicitor conspire to embezzle a fortune in bonds. A plucky young newspaper reporter pursues the rich man's daughter.
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Rhythm Serenade (1943)
Character: Jimmy Jimson
Patriotic musical romance. After her school is closed, teacher Ann tries to join up. However, she is persuaded to organise a nursery for a munitions factory.
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Hobson's Choice (1954)
Character: Sam Minns
A widower refuses to let his three daughters marry in order to avoid paying settlements, so they'll just have to outsmart him.
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The Galloping Major (1951)
Character: Sergeant Adair
A syndicate is set up to buy a racehorse, but they end up buying the wrong one by mistake. Unfortunately the horse is useless on the flat, so they try entering him as a jumper.
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Bedelia (1946)
Character: Dr. McAfee
Bedelia Carrington is living happily, it appears, in Monte Carlo with her husband Charlie Carrington. But a cultivated young artist, Ben Chaney, begins probing into her past with curious concern. Chaney, who is really a detective, learns that Bedelia's obsession for money has led her, in the past, to husband-poisoning for the insurance money.
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Hotel Reserve (1944)
Character: Michel Beghin, intelligence chief
A hunt for a spy in a hotel in the South of France just before World War Two.
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Vigil in the Night (1940)
Character: Matthew Bowley
A good nurse ruins her career by covering up for her sister's careless mistake.
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The Sea Hawk (1940)
Character: Oliver Scott
Dashing pirate Geoffrey Thorpe plunders Spanish ships for Queen Elizabeth I and falls in love with Dona Maria, a beautiful Spanish royal he captures.
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The Goose Steps Out (1942)
Character: General Von Glotz
Schoolteacher William Potts is the double of a captured German spy, so he is sent to Germany by British Intelligence to obtain the plans of a new secret weapon, causing chaos in a Hitler Youth school in the process.
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It's in the Air (1938)
Character: The Sergeant Major
George Brown is rejected as an Air Raid Warden and in doing so sees his potential to join the Royal Air Force. His dreams could soon come true as he realises that in fact his friend has left behind some very important papers, he dons a his Royal Air Force uniform and delivers the papers when he is mistaken for a dispatch driver from HQ. He soon becomes the butt of jokes from his sergeant which ends him staying indefinitely at the air base. George soon falls in love with the Sergeant Major's daughter and when he discovers his real identity he threatens to report him. On the day of an annual inspection George attempts to escape the base and ends up in a plane, while the inspecting officer watches on, George's plane display is mesmerizing and the inspecting officer insists he should be commended, in order to save their skins George manages to land the plane and is accepted as a flyer by the RAF.
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The Magnet (1950)
Character: Mayor
A classic Ealing comedy in which a young boy steals a magnet and becomes a hero.
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The Last Journey (1935)
Character: Bob Holt
Bob Holt's last journey as a Railway engine driver before his retirement, a journey disturbed by his distress at leaving the Railway, and his suspicions of the relationship between his wife and his fireman. Aboard the train are a pair of pickpockets, a honeymoon couple, a drunk, a temperance pamphleteer and a host of familiar types, all more-or-less bizarre in characteristically English ways. Bob takes an unexpected course of action, and the characters start interacting in varied and unexpected ways. When, at last, the train stops, all has been resolved, but not as might have been expected at the beginning of the journey.
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High Treason (1951)
Character: Mr Philips - Union Rep (uncredited)
Men from Scotland Yard and military intelligence build a dossier on a sabotage ring.
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