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Incident at Vichy (1973)
Character: Old Jew
Adapted from Arthur Miller's play, film focuses on a group of Frenchmen who are detained at Vichy, the capital of France while under Nazi occupation, and "investigated" under suspicion of secretly being Jewish.
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Revisiting 'Fail-Safe' (2000)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Documentary featuring interviews with director Sidney Lumet, "Fail-Safe" (2000) producer George Clooney, star Dan O’Herlihy and screenwriter Walter Bernstein.
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'Fail-Safe' and the Cold War (2020)
Character: Self (archive footage)
Film critic J. Hoberman discusses the best-selling 1962 novel by Eugene Burdick and Harvey Wheeler on which "Fail-Safe" is based, along with the pervasiveness of nuclear paranoia in films of the sixties.
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Blood Sport (1973)
Character: Mr. Millsaps
A searing commentary on the "win at all costs" mentality of American high school sports. David Lee Birdsong is the smalltown quarterback hoping to escape with a college scholarship and a pro career. David's father is the overbearing taskmaster vicariously living through his son. The third side of the triangle is Coach Marshall, a hypercritical and cruel man who sees David as the key to his future success. David's lockstep commitment to his father and coach is altered when he witnesses a teammate die after a grueling practice.
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Unwed Father (1974)
Character: Judge
A teenage boy fathers a child with his girlfriend. He then fights his parents, the girlfriend, the girl's parents and the courts in an attempt to get custody of the child.
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Gideon (1971)
Character: Ozni
The Angel of God and an ordinary shepherd named Gideon debate obedience versus disobedience to God.
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The Trip to Bountiful (1953)
Character: Second Houston Ticket Man
A woman has to live with a daughter in law who hates her and a son who does not dare take her side. While the unhappy family lives in a Houston apartment, Carrie Watts dreams of returning to Bountiful, where she was raised.
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Abe Lincoln in Illinois (1964)
Character: Mentor Graham
The life of Abraham Lincoln is traced from the 1830s when he was a struggling backwoods lawyer to winning the Presidency in 1860.
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Shirts/Skins (1973)
Character: Perlman
Six businessmen who have a weekly after-hours basketball game get caught up in a bet about a hide-and-seek contest.
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An Enemy of the People (1966)
Character: N/A
Set in a Norwegian hamlet, an idealistic physician discovers that the town's hot springs are contaminated. But with the community relying on the spa for tourist dollars, his warning to the powers-that-be falls on deaf ears.
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Sand Castles (1972)
Character: Sascha
A young man who dies in an auto accident returns from the dead to meet up with the young woman who tried to save him.
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Target Risk (1975)
Character: Friedrich
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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The Love Song of Barney Kempinski (1968)
Character: Tourist #2
On his wedding day, in the few remaining hours of his bachelorhood, Barney Kempinski goes off to tour the city and sing his song to life, love and the city of New York.
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Big Deal in Laredo (1962)
Character: Doctor Scully
A timid man with money problems gets into a big card game with some high-rollers.
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Birdman of Alcatraz (1962)
Character: Fred Daw (uncredited)
After killing a prison guard, convict Robert Stroud faces life imprisonment in solitary confinement. Driven nearly mad by loneliness and despair, Stroud's life gains new meaning when he happens upon a helpless baby sparrow in the exercise yard and nurses it back to health. Despite having only a third grade education, Stroud goes on to become a renowned ornithologist and achieves a greater sense of freedom and purpose behind bars than most people find in the outside world.
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The Arrangement (1969)
Character: Dr. Weeks
An adman attempts to rebuild his shattered life after suffering a nervous breakdown.
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Homebodies (1974)
Character: Mr. Sandy
When a quiet group of pensioners learn that their homes are to be torn down to make way for a block of flats, they decide to take action. What starts as an attempt to discourage the developers soon escalates into wholesale murder of both the developers and the construction workers.
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The Laughing Policeman (1973)
Character: Mr. Schwermer, Bus Vicitm
When a gunman opens fire on a crowded city bus in San Francisco, Detective Dave Evans is killed, along with the man he'd been following in relation to a murder. Evans' partner, Sgt. Jake Martin, becomes obsessed with solving the case.
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99 and 44/100% Dead (1974)
Character: Joe - Kelly's Accountant
Uncle Frank Kelly calls on Harry Crown to help him in a gang war. The war becomes personal when Harry's new girlfriend is kidnapped by Uncle Frank's enemy, Big Eddie.
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Willard (1971)
Character: Barskin
A social misfit, Willard is made fun of by his co-workers, and squeezed out of the company started by his deceased father by his boss. His only friends are a couple of rats he raised at home, Ben and Socrates. However, when one of them is killed at work, he goes on a rampage using his rats to attack those who have been tormenting him.
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Pinky (1949)
Character: Mr. Goolby (uncredited)
Pinky, a light skinned black woman, returns to her grandmother's house in the South after graduating from a Northern nursing school. Pinky tells her grandmother that she has been "passing" for white while at school in the North. In addition, she has fallen in love with a young white doctor, who knows nothing about her black heritage.
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The Member of the Wedding (1952)
Character: Mr. Addams
Tomboy, Frances 'Frankie' Addams, dreams of running away with her brother and new fiancée away from the Deep South.
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Save the Tiger (1973)
Character: Meyer
A businessman's professional struggles begin to conflict with his personal life over the course of two days.
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Frankenstein (1973)
Character: Prof. Waldman
A scientist obsessed with creating life steals body parts to put together his "creation." Released as a feature on video, this was originally shown in two installments on TV as part of the Wide World of Entertainment series.
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Fail Safe (1964)
Character: Defense Secretary Swenson
Because of a technical defect an American bomber team mistakenly orders the destruction of Moscow. The President of the United States has but little time to prevent an atomic catastrophe from occurring.
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The Terminal Man (1974)
Character: Dr. Ezra Manon
As the result of a head injury, brilliant computer scientist Harry Benson begins to experience violent seizures. In an attempt to control the seizures, Benson undergoes a new surgical procedure in which a microcomputer is inserted into his brain. The procedure is not entirely successful.
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Get Christie Love! (1974)
Character: Dr. Shepard
Get Christie Love! is a 1974 made-for-television film starring Teresa Graves as an undercover female police detective who is determined to overthrow a drug ring. This film is based on Dorothy Uhnak's crime-thriller novel, The Ledger.
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The Bramble Bush (1960)
Character: Father Bannon
A young doctor returns to his Massachusetts home town at the request of a terminally ill old friend.
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Night Games (1974)
Character: Doctor Ciovica
A Harvard-educated, big-city lawyer moves to a small Arizona town to set up practice. His first case is defending a beautiful socialite accused of murdering her husband. This is the pilot TV movie for what would become the Petrocelli TV series.
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1776 (1972)
Character: Caesar Rodney (DE)
Colonial representatives gather in Philadelphia with the aim of establishing a set of governmental rules for the burgeoning United States. Benjamin Franklin and John Adams charge Thomas Jefferson with the task of writing a statement announcing the new country's emancipation from British rule.
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