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Mark of the Gorilla (1950)
Character: Head Ranger
Nazis dressed to look like Great Apes are looking for gold, and Jungle Jim must stop them.
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The Crimson Kimono (1959)
Character: Hansel
Two detectives clash over the hunt for a burlesque dancer’s killer in Los Angeles’ Japanese district.
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The Raiders (1952)
Character: Juan
A rancher who has staked a claim during the California gold rush goes after the gang of murderous claim-jumpers who have stolen his claim and murdered his wife.
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The Phantom Cowboy (1941)
Character: Miguel Garcia (El Lobo) (as Neyle Marx)
Stan Borden with the help of the stooge Sheriff is out to get the Toreno ranch. Kicking the peons off the ranch, they kill Miguel's father. Miguel then becomes the masked El Lobo and when Jim Lawrence arrives, the two team up to fight Borden and the Sheriff.
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Shock Corridor (1963)
Character: Psycho
With the help of his girlfriend Cathy and Dr. Fong, a psychiatrist, ambitious journalist Johnny Barrett poses as a madman in order to be admitted to a mental institution where a bloody murder has been committed.
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Sirocco (1951)
Character: Syrian Lad (uncredited)
A mysterious American gets mixed up with gunrunners in Syria.
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Congo Bill (1948)
Character: Kahla
Congo Bill is hired to locate an heiress lost somewhere in Africa.
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Pirates of the High Seas (1950)
Character: Kalana
For decades, pirates roamed the seas, searching for booty to plunder and coastal villages to terrorize. Who were these men and women? As you dig beneath the myth of Blackbeard, Captain Kidd and other legendary warriors of the waters in this docudrama, you'll discover who they were and what motivated them to wreak havoc wherever they sailed. Includes the movie Long John Silver's Return to Treasure Island.
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On the Isle of Samoa (1950)
Character: Mutu
After committing a robbery, a man is inspired to confess by a lovely native girl he meets on a small island.
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China Gate (1957)
Character: Leung
Near the end of the French phase of the Vietnam War, a group of mercenaries are recruited to travel through enemy territory to the Chinese border.
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Pirates of Monterey (1947)
Character: Manuel de Roja
A woman journeys to Spanish California to marry a Spanish officer, but on the way she meets and falls in love with an American adventurer who is part of a movement to overthrow the Spanish in California.
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A Guy Named Joe (1944)
Character: Flier (uncredited)
A cocky U.S. Army Air Force pilot stationed in England during World War II falls for a daring female flier. After he's killed on a mission, he's sent back to Earth by a heavenly General with a new assignment.
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Park Row (1952)
Character: Thomas Guest
In New York's 1880s newspaper district, a dedicated journalist manages to set up his own paper. It is an immediate success but attracts increasing opposition from one of the bigger papers and its newspaper heiress owner.
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Dogface (1959)
Character: Private Gibson
This unaired pilot for a series Fuller pitched to CBS about a U.S. infantry troop fighting its way through Nazi-held North Africa offers a fascinating new angle on Fuller’s relationship with the average foot soldier and moral complexity of war.
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Under Fire (1957)
Character: Lt. Conroy
An Army lawyer defends a World War II hero and his men accused of desertion.
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Meet the Wildcat (1940)
Character: Mexican Teenager
Magazine photographer Ann Larkin is snapping photos at Mexico's National Museum when she sees Brod Williams steal a painting from its frame. Convinced that Brod is the notorious art thief known as "The Wildcat," Ann follows him into the street and accuses him of being the thief. Even though the police attest that Brod is a New York City police detective, Ann remains dubious.
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Hi Diddle Diddle (1943)
Character: Newsboy (uncredited)
When the bride's mother is supposedly swindled out of her money by a spurned suitor, the groom's father orchestrates a scheme of his own to set things right. He is aided by a cabaret singer, while placating a jealous wife.
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Valley of Head Hunters (1953)
Character: Native
Bad guys trying to steal the mineral rights away from African natives find it isn't so easy fighting Jungle Jim.
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The Master Key (1945)
Character: Spike
Before the outbreak of WWII, Nazi sympathizers plot to undermine America.
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Underworld U.S.A. (1961)
Character: Barney
A bitter young man sets out to get back at the gangsters who murdered his father.
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Danger in the Pacific (1942)
Character: Lobo (as Neyle Marx)
Scientist-explorer David Lynd leaves wealthy bride-to-be June Claymore at the altar to join photographer Andy Parker and British secret service agent Leo Marzeli in search of rare minerals. They soon run afoul of crooked trader Tagani, who's been busily stockpiling weapons in the hills on behalf of his Nazi partners.
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Raiders of the Desert (1941)
Character: Moviow / Zeid (as Neyle Marx)
Two American leave a ship where they had stowed away, in a Middle Eastern port and wind up in the fighting in a brutal civil war
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The White Squaw (1956)
Character: N/A
A Swedish settler starts a war when he tries to drive Dakotas off their Wyoming reservation.
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Escape to Burma (1955)
Character: N/A
A fugitive in British Burma hides on a tea plantation, thanks to a mutual attraction with owner Gwen Moore.
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The Big Sombrero (1949)
Character: Tico
Gene is hired to be foreman of the Big Sombrero ranch by Jim Garland, who is handling all the business affairs of the owner, Estrellita Estrada, who is more interested in going to America than taking care of her Mexican holdings. Gene, discovering Garland's plan to run all the Mexican rancheros off the ranch, turns against his boss and shortly finds himself in the middle of cattle stampedes and an avalanche started by Garland's men.
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Drums of the Desert (1940)
Character: Ben Ali
On his way to a post as special adviser of the new parachute troops of the French Foreign Legion in Morocco, Paul Dumont meets the beautiful Helene on the ship. A romance ensues, but the two decide to part when Paul learns that Helene is the fiancée of his best friend and fellow officer Raoul. Raoul is wounded during an Arab attack and the wedding is postponed, and Helene and Paul are thrown together and find it impossible to hide their feelings. The meet in the tent of Hassan, a fortune teller, not knowing the tent is a storage place for arms and ammunition belonging to Addullah, an Arab leader determined to avenge the death of his brother Ben Ali.
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Man-Eater of Kumaon (1948)
Character: Villager
A doctor hunts a vicious, man-eating tiger that terrorizes a native jungle village. In time the doctor experiences a personal change when he accepts their native customs and beliefs.
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The Naked Kiss (1964)
Character: Officer Sam
A former prostitute works to create a new life for herself in a small town, but a shocking discovery could threaten everything.
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Tarzan and the Leopard Woman (1946)
Character: Soldier (uncredited)
A tribe devoted to the leopard cult is dedicated to preventing civilization from moving further into Africa.
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Fixed Bayonets! (1951)
Character: Medic (uncredited)
The story of a platoon during the Korean War. One by one, Corporal Denno's superiors are killed until it comes to the point where he must try to take command responsibility.
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Forty Guns (1957)
Character: Wiley
An authoritarian rancher rules an Arizona county with her private posse of hired guns. When a new Marshall arrives to set things straight, the cattle queen finds herself falling for the avowedly non-violent lawman. Both have itchy-fingered brothers, a female gunman enters the picture, and things go desperately wrong.
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House of Bamboo (1955)
Character: Cpl. Davis (uncredited)
Eddie Kenner is given a special assignment by the Army to get the inside story on Sandy Dawson, a former GI who has formed a gang of fellow servicemen and Japanese locals.
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The Steel Helmet (1951)
Character: First GI
A ragtag group of American stragglers battles against superior Communist troops in an abandoned Buddhist temple during the Korean War.
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Jungle Jim (1948)
Character: Native Killed by Leopard
Lady scientist, Hilary Parker is searching for a rare drug to help combat polio. Opportunist Bruce Edwards joins the quest but is actually after gold and buried treasure.
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Holiday for Lovers (1959)
Character: Hotel porter
Clifton Webb as a strict, conservative father heads the cast of this 1959 comedy, about an American family vacationing in South America. Directed by Henry Levin, the film also features Jane Wyman, Jill St. John, Carol Lynley, Paul Henreid, Gary Crosby, Henny Backus, Wally Brown, Gardner McKay and Jose Greco.
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Run of the Arrow (1957)
Character: Lt. Stockwell
When the South loses the war, Confederate veteran O'Meara goes West, joins the Sioux, takes a wife and refuses to be an American but he must choose a side when the Sioux go to war against the U.S. Army.
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Trail of the Arrow (1952)
Character: (archive footage)
Two episodes of the TV series "Wild Bill Hickok" edited together and released as a feature.
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Ranger of Cherokee Strip (1949)
Character: Tokata
Having been framed for murder, the half-breed Joe Bearclaws (Douglas Kennedy) escapes from jail and Ranger Steve Howard (Monte Hale) goes after him. He catches up with him in the Cherokee Strip where he has no authority. Joe is then framed for another murder and this time Steve knows he is innocent and goes after the real killer.
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White Dog (1982)
Character: Soundman
Samuel Fuller’s throat-grabbing exposé on American racism was misunderstood and withheld from release when it was made in the early eighties.Today, the notorious film is lauded for its daring metaphor and gripping pulp filmmaking. Kristy McNichol stars as a young actress who adopts a lost German shepherd, only to discover through a series of horrifying incidents that the dog has been trained to attack black people, and Paul Winfield plays the animal trainer who tries to cure him. A snarling, uncompromising vision, White Dog is a tragic portrait of the evil done by that most corruptible of all animals; the human being.
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