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Night and Day (1946)
Character: Customer (uncredited)
When his first stage show fails, songwriter Cole Porter goes off to fight in WWI until, injured, he lands in a hospital. He impresses nurse Linda Lee with his creativity, but their budding romance must wait as Cole heads home. Back in New York, he mounts a series of popular shows, and when his work brings him back to Europe, he eventually marries Linda. But success doesn't spare him from marital complications or bad news about a beloved relative.
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On the Loose (1951)
Character: Larry Lindsay
After years of living in her selfish parents' (Melvyn Douglas and Lynn Bari) egotistical shadows, desperate teenager Jill Bradley (Joan Evans) makes a last-ditch play for attention by attempting suicide. Jill's guilt-ridden father tries at last to help her and to cheer her up but new problems arise.
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Roughly Speaking (1945)
Character: Frankie at 17
In the 1920s, enterprising Louise Randall is determined to succeed in a man's world. Despite numerous setbacks, she always picks herself back up and moves forward again.
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Just for You (1952)
Character: Jerry Blake
Jordan Blake (a widower) is a successful Broadway Producer who has always been to busy for his children, Barbara and Jerry. Girlfriend, Carolina a musical comedy star, urges Jordan to take his kids on a vacation and get to know them before they are all grown up. Is Jordan already too late?
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Hollywood Wonderland (1947)
Character: Tour Guide (uncredited)
Two tour guides take visitors on a promotional tour of Warner Bros.' studios.
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Air Cadet (1951)
Character: Walt Carver
A group of cadets have assorted problems at the U.S. Air Force Pilot Training Academy.
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Mother Is a Freshman (1949)
Character: Beaumont Jackson
Widow Abby Abbott is having serious money problems and has to dip into the family trust in order to pay for her daughter Susan's college tuition. The catch: Abby must also become a co-ed or she can't touch the money. After passing her entrance exams, Abby goes to college and becomes very popular, especially with a handsome English professor whom Susan has a crush on.
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Young and Wild (1958)
Character: Jerry Coltrin
Three juvenile-delinquents launch a reign of terror upon those who witnessed a deadly auto accident in this exploitation drama.
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Mother Wore Tights (1947)
Character: Bob Clarkman
In this chronicle of a vaudeville family, Myrtle McKinley (class of 1900) goes to San Francisco to attend business school, but ends up in a chorus line. Soon, star Frank Burt notices her talent, hires her for a "two-act", then marries her. Incidents of the marriage and the growing pains of eldest daughter Miriam are followed, interspersed with nostalgic musical numbers.
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Nora Prentiss (1947)
Character: Gregory Talbot
Quiet, organised Dr Talbot meets nightclub singer Nora Prentiss when she is slightly hurt in a street accident. Despite her misgivings they become heavily involved and Talbot finds he is faced with the choice of leaving Nora or divorcing his wife. When a patient expires in his office, a third option seems to present itself.
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Twelve O'Clock High (1949)
Character: Sergeant McIllhenny
In the early days of daylight bombing raids over Germany, General Frank Savage must take command of a 'hard luck' bomber group. Much of the story deals with his struggle to whip his group into a disciplined fighting unit in spite of heavy losses, and withering attacks by German fighters over their targets.
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Belles on Their Toes (1952)
Character: Frank Gilbreth
The "Cheaper by the Dozen" crew is back, sans Clifton Webb. Lillian is struggling to make ends meet without her husband's income, while Anne, Martha, and even Ernestine find romance.
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Yellow Sky (1948)
Character: Bull Run
In 1867, a gang robs a bank and flees into the desert. Out of water, the outlaws encounter a ghost town called Yellow Sky and its only residents, a hostile young woman and her grandfather.
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The System (1953)
Character: Rex Merrick
A gambling boss is pressured by the law and press when a crusade is started against him after one of his collectors becomes a killer.
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Mildred Pierce (1945)
Character: High School Boy (uncredited)
A hard-working mother inches towards disaster as she divorces her husband and starts a successful restaurant business to support her spoiled daughter.
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Wild Youth (1961)
Character: Frankie
A teenage escapee from a correctional facility falls in with a drug dealer operating near the Mexican border.
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Top of the World (1955)
Character: Skippy McGuire
A team of Air Force servicemen become stranded after setting up a weather station on an island of ice in Alaska.
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Sweetheart of Sigma Chi (1946)
Character: Harry Townsend
A couple of gamblers pressure the local night club owner to rig things so the local college rowing crew will lose their upcoming race.
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September Affair (1950)
Character: David Lawrence Jr.
An industrialist and a pianist meet on a trip and fall in love. Through a quirk of fate, they are reported dead in a crash though they weren't on the plane. This gives them the opportunity to live together free from their previous lives. Unfortunately, this artificial arrangement leads to greater and greater stress. Eventually the situation collapses when they come to pursue their original, individual interests without choosing a common path.
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Take the High Ground! (1953)
Character: Donald Quentin Dover IV
Sgt. Thorne Ryan, who once fought bravely in Korea, now serves as a hard-nosed drill instructor to new Army recruits at Fort Bliss, Texas. But is he really the man he is often described as? His fellow instructor, and friend helps him to face the ghosts of his past experiences in Korea. One night in a bar across the border in Juarez, Mexico, Sgt. Ryan meets a lady who begins to turn his life around. Will this be enough to help him deal with the past? Or will he continue to be so hard on his troops?
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You're My Everything (1949)
Character: Harold - College Boy in 'Heart of a Co-Ed'
In 1924, stage-struck Boston blueblood Hannah Adams picks up musical star Tim O'Connor and takes him home for dinner. One thing leads to another, and when Tim's show rolls on to Chicago a new Mrs. O'Connor comes along as incompetent chorus girl. Hollywood beckons, and we follow the star careers of the O'Connor family in silents and talkies.
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Danger Signal (1945)
Character: Hotel Boy
After robbing and murdering his married lover and then making her death look like suicide, conniving philanderer Ronnie Mason relocates to Los Angeles. Under a new identity and claiming to be a writer, Ronnie finds lodging at the home of Hilda Fenchurch and her mother. He woos Hilda, knowing she has money, but when he discovers that Hilda's sister, Anne, has just inherited $25,000, he switches his attentions to her.
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The Ring (1952)
Character: Billy Smith
A young Mexican/American learns about life both inside and out of the ring when he takes up boxing.
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The Desperados Are in Town (1956)
Character: Lonny Kesh
In this western, a young man tries to walk the straight and narrow, but he is impeded by his past. The trouble begins when the young fellow flees his family's Texas dirt farm and becomes an outlaw. He is advised by one of the desperadoes to return home. The boy does, and with hard work, makes the farm successful. Harvest time rolls around. He is just about to celebrate when the outlaws ride up and force him to help them pull a local bank job. He refuses and kills the gang leader and his brother. Meanwhile, the boy's past is revealed to the town banker. Seeing that he truly has gone straight, the banker forgives him. The boy marries and lives with his lovely bride upon his land.
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Young Bess (1953)
Character: Barnaby
The mother died under the executioner's axe; the daughter rose to become England's greatest monarch -- the brilliant and cunning Queen Elizabeth I. Jean Simmons portrays young Bess in this rich tapestry of a film that traces the tumultuous, danger-fraught years from Elizabeth's birth to her unexpected ascension to the throne at a mere 25. Charles Laughton reprises his Academy Award®-winning* role as her formidable father Henry VIII. Deborah Kerr plays her last stepmother (and Henry's last of six wives), gentle Catherine Parr. And Simmons' then real-life husband, Stewart Granger, adds heroics as Lord Admiral Thomas Seymour. In a resplendent world of adventure, romance and court intrigue, Young Bess reigns.
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Hellcats of the Navy (1957)
Character: Freddy Warren
Future "first couple" Ronald Reagan and Nancy Davis made their only joint film appearance in Hellcats of the Navy. Ronnie plays Casey Abbott, commander of a WW2 submarine, while Nancy portrays navy nurse Helen Blair, Abbott's off-and-on girlfriend. During a delicate mission in which his sub is ordered to retrieve a revolutionary new Japanese mine, Abbott is forced to leave frogman Wes Barton (Harry Lauter) behind to save the rest of his crew. But Abbott's second-in-command Don Landon (Eduard Franz) is convinced that Abbott's sacrifice of Barton was due to the fact that the dead man had been amorously pursuing Helen.
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Return from the Sea (1954)
Character: Porter
A hardened career navel officer must come to terms with adapting to civilian life with the help of a waitress that can see through his tough veneer.
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The Devil On Wheels (1947)
Character: Todd Powell
A teenager is involved in running from the police in his hot rod hits a car in a hit-and-run case where the victims turn out to be his mother and his best friend in another hot rod.
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Ace in the Hole (1951)
Character: Herbie Cook
An arrogant reporter exploits a story about a man trapped in a cave to revitalize his career.
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Green Grass of Wyoming (1948)
Character: Ken McLaughlin
The romance of a rancher's niece and a rival rancher's son parallels that of a stallion and a mare.
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Jock Empire (1984)
Character: Mr. Hays
Jockstraps and body worship are featured in College Jocks. Toes are sucked, legs are kissed, piss slits are licked, and asses are eaten, besides fucking and sucking.
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The Diamond Stud (1995)
Character: Mr. Boyle / Mr. Santacroce
Diamond Kincaid is a famous gay singer who hires a bodyguard to keep his secret. Escapades occur including a sizzling pool three way with Kincaid and two pro athletes. The guard and Diamond fall in love culminating in a nude motorcycle ride and versatile lovemaking.
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Rassle (1992)
Character: the Reporter
A reporter interviews a college wrestling coach (Jon Vincent) about his star athletes and gets more than he bargained for in one of the best videos to combine storyline, wrestling, and cock-popping sex. First, there's the time he forced two goof-offs to take it up the ass on his office desk; then, there's the steamy story about the jockstrapped athlete (Jeff Dillon) who complains to his doctor about a "stiffness" near his upper thigh that began when he caught two of his teammates having a dick measuring contest; finally, Coach Vincent challenges his smart-mouthed star (Steve Gibson) to an afterhours nude wrestling meet. They just don't come any better than this!
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Rushes (1986)
Character: Uncle Arthur
Evil director (Kenneth Weyerhauser) uses sex to trap newcomers to the porn world.
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Jobsite (1984)
Character: (non-sexual)
Hard hats and hard men converge at Jobsite, the wildest bar in town. From the backroom stalls to the front door, the action is fast, furious, and always fulfilling. Never have so many big poles been erected so quickly!
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Kiss-Off (1992)
Character: the Police Lieutenant
Still one of director Douglas' best, and one of the most winning, romantic, intense and best "acted" gay porn’s ever. The story centers around rookie cop Axel Garret and his encounters with homophobia on the base, prostitution and falling in love. There are terrific sequences involving tearoom and movie theatre busts, hustler ring exposures and some absolutely amazing fuck scenes. Watch for the scene in the limo: lots of romantic stares and deep-throat action.
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