Different genres of motion pictures appeal to diverse people. There are always those who love a wonderful horror movie and dislike a good chick flick but most of the time there are some films that we like and others that we abhor no matter the genre. The great thing about the movie entertainment business is that they always offer up something that appeals to everybody. Some good information about some of the greatest films that you may have never heard of is right here. Enjoy this list of films that are “oldies but goodies”.
In 1999 Doug’s First Movie from the celebrity of Television’s Doug is characterized in this bland, formulaic saga, produced exclusively for children. Easy going preteen Doug attempts to spare an creature in need collide with his aspiration to take his girl friend to the school dance. This movie was released as a direct-to-video production. Voices of Thomas McHugh, Fred Newman, Chris Phillips, Constance Shulman, Doug Preis, and Alice Playten.
The Meteor Man from 1993. Townsend plays a hesitant, nerdy school teacher with a fear of heights who gets hit by an peculiar bright green meteor that turns him into a superhero. Excellent “Superman in the Hood” tale, filled of good values, but very few actually funny minutes. Cast includes Robert Townsend, Marla Gibbs, Eddie Griffin, Robert Guillaume, James Earl Jones, Roy Fegan, and Bill Cosby.
The Sinister Urge from 1960. Dedicated cops Duncan and Moore set out to beat the “smut film racket,” which is run by a brassy blonde. Illustrates with complete assurance how pictures of plump women clothed in only their underwear can be a main cause of adolescent wrongdoing. Cast includes Kenne Duncan, Duke Moore, Carl Anthony, Jean Fontaine, Dino Fantini, and Jeanne Willardson.
The Sentinel from 1977. Effortless yet mindless shocker in reference to N. Y.C. fashion model, who rents a home in Brooklyn, discovers it is filled of demons and she is the next guardian for the entrance to Hell. Cast includes Cristina Raines, Ava Gardner, Chris Sarandon, Burgess Meredith, Sylvia Miles, Jose Ferrer, Arthur Kennedy, John Carradine, Christopher Walken, Eli Wallach, Jerry Orbach, Jeff Goldblum, Beverly D’ Angelo, Martin Balsam, William Hickey, and Tom Berenger. (93 minutes, 1977)
Each Dawn I Die from 1939. Reporter Cagney is framed, and sent to the prison where he meets a dangerous inmate, Raft. There is outstanding acting all around. Cagney hits a white-hot peak with his character, however the last half of movie gets to be outrageously improbable. Music score composed by Max Steiner. Cast includes James Cagney, George Raft, George Bancroft, Jane Bryan, Maxie Rosenbloom, Stanley Ridges, Louis Jean Heydt, Abner Biberman, John Wray, Victor Jory, and Thurston Chamber.
The Defiant in 1958 is a captivating tale of 2 fugitive convicts, one black and one white who are chained together as they escape from the penitentiary in the South. Exceptional performances by Williams and Chaney as individuals they meet during the voyage. Academy Prize for screenplay by Harold Jacob Smith and Nathan E. Cast includes Tony Curtis, Sidney Poitier, Theodore Bike, Charles McGraw, Carnie Williams, and Lon Chaney, Jr.
1948 was the year The Search came out. Moving drama of American cadet Clift regarding for concentration camp survivor Jandl in postwar Berlin, when the boy’s mother glumly looks all over the camps for him. Beautifully performed and directed. Cast includes Montgomery Clift, Ivan Jandl, Aline MacMahon, Jarmila Novotna, and Wendell Corey.
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