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Ever Since Eden (1942)
Character: Livingston
A history of the tomato. Begins with the discovery of the plant by Cortes when he conquered Montezuma.
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Street of Memories (1940)
Character: Joe Mason / Richard Havens
Joe Mason suffers from amnesia and is often in trouble. Catherine Foster befriends him and they marry. After a jolt jogs his memory, he remembers that he is the son of a rich businessman from Chicago, but he can't remember anything recent.
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Contented Calves (1934)
Character: Reddington Company Office Worker
An add campaign for stockings embarrasses the girls.
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Your Uncle Dudley (1935)
Character: Robert Kirby
A paint store owner turns his attention to civic affairs while his business falls apart.
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Wedded Blitz (1942)
Character: N/A
Errol is a character actor who wears various makeups, costumes, and disguises when he goes home. His neighbors mistakenly suspect his glamorous young wife is playing around with strange men.
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Love in September (1936)
Character: N/A
The story of a kindly old lady, her involvement with midget race cars and their drivers.
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Highways by Night (1942)
Character: James 'Duke' Wellington
A young millionaire (Richard Carlson) joins the real world and meets a maid (Jane Randolph) and mobsters.
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Shadow of a Doubt (1943)
Character: Teen at Crosswalk (uncredited)
In sleepy Santa Rosa, restless young Charlie’s world brightens when her sophisticated Uncle Charlie arrives for a long visit. But as his behavior grows increasingly strange, she begins to suspect that her beloved uncle may be hiding a terrible secret—and that danger has quietly entered her home.
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You're in the Navy Now (1951)
Character: Naval Commander
When Lt. John Harkness is assigned as the new skipper of a submarine chaser equipped with an experimental steam engine, he hopes that the U.S.S. Teakettle's veterans will afford him enough help to accomplish the ship's goals. Unfortunately, he finds the crew and its officers share his novice status or only have experience in diesel engines.
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The Sea Hornet (1951)
Character: Policeman
"The Sea Hornet" was a merchant ship sunk, supposedly by a torpedo, less than a mile off the California Coast during World War Two. Six years later when his buddy is killed, attempting to blow up the sunken ship, on the orders of Suntan Radford and Tony Sullivan, deep-sea diver "Gunner" McNeil has his suspicions aroused... especially since Suntan is the daughter of the ship's captain that died when the ship sunk, and Sullivan was a crew member. Plus the fact the ship had over a million dollars in cash on board. During the course of his investigation, he becomes romantically involved with Ginger Sullivan
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Powder Town (1942)
Character: Harvey Dodge
Director Rowland V. Lee's wacky 1942 comedy, about an absent-minded scientist working on a secret formula at an explosives plant, stars Edmond O'Brien, Victor McLaglen, Dorothy Lovett, June Havoc, Eddie Foy Jr., Marion Martin and Mary Gordon.
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Bells of San Angelo (1947)
Character: Rex Gridley
Gridley is mining silver from an old Mexican mine and bringing it into the USA thru a passage into his worthless mine. Border guard Rogers suspects Gridley and finally finds the secret entrance to the Mexican mine. He sends Lee Madison for help only to have her captured by Gridley. Trigger brings help that takes care of Gridley's men and now Roy has to rescue Madison.
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Human Cargo (1936)
Character: 'Spike' Davis
Bonnie Brewster and "Packy" Campbell, rival reporters on competing newspapers, team up to put an end to a smuggling gang that brings illegal aliens to the United States, and then makes further victims of them by extortion payments. They go to Vancouver, Canada and board a ship carrying aliens. But the gang recognizes them as reporters and gang-henchmen Tony Scula (Ralf Harolde) and Ira Conklin take them off the ship. But Campbell recognizes Scula as the gunman who killed Carmen Zoro.
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Flamingo Road (1949)
Character: N/A
A stranded carnival dancer takes on a corrupt political boss when she marries into small-town society.
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Wanted: Jane Turner (1936)
Character: Jerry Turner
Investigators set out to capture a gang of thieves transporting stolen cash through the U.S. mail.
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Dead of Night (1945)
Character: Hugo Fitch (Segment "The Ventriloquist's Dummy") (Uncredited)
An architect, visiting an English country house, realizes the other guests are familiar from his recurring nightmare. When they share their tales of the supernatural, he is filled with a growing dread.
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White Heat (1949)
Character: Psychiatrist #2 (uncredited)
A psychopathic criminal with a mother complex makes a daring break from prison and then leads his old gang in a chemical plant payroll heist. After the heist, events take a crazy turn.
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The Lady Takes a Sailor (1949)
Character: Coast Guard Officer (uncredited)
Jennifer Smith heads a "Consumer Reports"-type company and her reputation for honesty is her greatest asset. While out boating one day she encounters a secret prototype submarine piloted by Bill Craig. Trying to explain her absence after her boat sinks becomes very difficult as Bill and his cohorts attempt to discredit her story.
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Charlie Chan at the Circus (1936)
Character: Hal Blake
While visiting the circus with his family, Charlie is recruited by the big top's co-owner to investigate threatening letters that he's received.
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My Favorite Spy (1942)
Character: Nightclub Patron
The Army takes a bandleader (Kay Kyser) away from his bride (Ellen Drew) and sends him on a spy mission with a woman (Jane Wyman).
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The Racket (1951)
Character: Policeman in Locker Room (uncredited)
The big national crime syndicate has moved into town, partnering up with local crime boss Nick Scanlon. McQuigg, the only honest police captain on the force, and his loyal patrolman, Johnson, take on the violent Nick.
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Mexican Spitfire Sees a Ghost (1942)
Character: Luders
Carmelita and Uncle Matt find themselves in a haunted house, but the "ghosts" are actually enemy agents who are trying to frighten away visitors in order to develop a nitroglycerin bomb.
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Sea Raiders (1941)
Character: Tom Adams
A bunch of waterfront youths pursue the Sea Raiders, a gang of saboteurs.
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He Walked by Night (1949)
Character: Officer Robert Rawlins (uncredited)
Roy Martin aka Roy Morgan is a burglar and former war-time Radio & Electronics Engineer who listens in to radio police calls, allowing him to stay one step ahead of the cops.
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Sands of Iwo Jima (1950)
Character: Capt. Joyce
Haunted by personal demons, Marine Sgt. John Stryker is hated and feared by his men, who see him as a cold-hearted sadist. But when their boots hit the beaches, they begin to understand the reason for Stryker's rigid form of discipline.
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This Is the Life (1935)
Character: Michael Grant
A popular child star, exploited and overworked by her greedy guardians, decides enough is enough--and takes it on the lam.
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Stranger on the Third Floor (1940)
Character: Michael Ward
Newspaper reporter Michael Ward plunges into a nightmare of guilt, fearing that his "evidence" has sentenced the wrong man to death.
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Outlaw Rule (1935)
Character: Danny Taylor
A rancher, frustrated with constant cattle rustling and the inability of the local sheriff to stop it, is accused of murder when the sheriff is found dead.
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Steamboat Round the Bend (1935)
Character: Duke
A Louisiana con man enters his steamboat into a winner-take-all race with a rival while trying to find a witness to free his nephew, about to be hanged for murder.
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The Magnificent Ambersons (1942)
Character: Young Man (uncredited)
The spoiled young heir to the decaying Amberson fortune comes between his widowed mother and the man she has always loved.
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The Strawberry Roan (1948)
Character: Bud Williams
Young Joe is paralyzed as he is bucked by a wild horse, a strawberry roan. Angered, his father, Walt, tries to shoot the horse but is stopped by his foreman, Gene Autry. The roan escapes and Autry, told to leave the ranch by Walt, finds and trains the horse, now named Champ, in hopes that by returning it to Joe it will provide him with the will to overcome his disability.
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Invisible Ghost (1941)
Character: Ralph Dickson / Paul Dickson
The town's leading citizen becomes a homicidal maniac after his wife deserts him.
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The First Legion (1951)
Character: Father Tom Rawleigh
A Catholic priest fights against his colleagues' immediate acceptance of an ambiguous “miracle”.
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The Prisoner of Shark Island (1936)
Character: Lieutenant Lovett
After healing the leg of the murderer John Wilkes Booth, responsible for the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, perpetrated on April 14, 1865, during a performance at Ford's Theatre in Washington; Dr. Samuel A. Mudd, considered part of the atrocious conspiracy, is sentenced to life imprisonment and sent to the sinister Shark Island Prison.
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Rock Island Trail (1950)
Character: Army Lieutenant
A greedy businessman tries to block the building of a new railroad in his area.
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When Willie Comes Marching Home (1950)
Character: Major L.T. Moore (uncredited)
When Willie leaves home to join the war effort he is all ready to become a hero, but he is only frustrated when his posting ends up to be in his home town, and he is recruited into training, keeping him from the action. However, when he finds himself accidently behind enemy lines he unexpectedly becomes a hero after all.
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Federal Agent at Large (1950)
Character: Customs Officer
A crime ring is smuggling gold from Mexico across the border in the US. The Customs Service sends an agent to Mexico to try to infiltrate the ring and stop the smuggling.
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End of the Trail (1936)
Character: Larry Pearson
In this western, a Spanish-American war veteran cannot find gainful employment. In desperation, he becomes a cattle rustler until he can get back on his feet. Just as he is ready to go straight, his girlfriend's younger brother is shot.
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Mexican Spitfire at Sea (1942)
Character: First Officer Reynolds
An advertising executive and his temperamental wife sail to Hawaii in search of business. The fifth entry (of eight) in the "Mexican Spitfire" comedy series.
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Fighter Squadron (1948)
Character: N/A
During World War II, an insubordinate fighter pilot finds the shoe on the other foot when he's promoted.
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Sky Liner (1949)
Character: George Eakins
Travellers board a flight, unaware that other passengers might be spies and counterspies, complete with secret documents, poison and elaborate plans to engage in international espionage!
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Women Without Names (1940)
Character: Walter Ferris
Joyce and Fred MacNeil's honeymoon comes to an abrupt and unsatisfying halt when Fred is accused of murder. Railroaded into prison through the efforts of politically ambitious assistant DA Marlin, Fred awaits his doom on Death Row, while Joyce works overtime on the outside to clear her husband's name
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Highway 13 (1948)
Character: N/A
Hank Wilson is a driver for a truck for a big transportation company which is in financial straits. He is in love with Doris Lacy, a waitress at the truck-stop where the company has its truck fleet serviced. Frequent accidents near the place leads the company to hire a private detective to investigate, and when the detective is murdered Hank is arrested as a suspect. The insurance company that covers the fleet has him released and he is sent back to work with instructions to investigate the accidents on his own. The trail leads to the uncle of Doris, and one of the part-owners of the company.
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