A secret agent, Harry Tasker, uncovers his wife's affair while also dealing with terrorists smuggling nuclear warheads into the U.S.
Goodbye, Mr. Chips tells the story of a dedicated language teacher at a boys' boarding school in Austria during the early 1900s. Through the years, he forms strong bonds with his students and navigates through various challenges, including the outbreak of World War I. As he looks back on his life, he reminisces about the impact he has had on his students and the profound influence they have had on him.
The Great Waltz is a musical drama set in Vienna, Austria in the year 1845. It tells the story of a talented musician, Johann Strauss, and his journey to becoming a famous Viennese composer. Along the way, he faces romantic rivalry, self-sacrifice, and the challenges of fame. The movie explores his relationships, including his tumultuous marriage and extramarital affairs. It also highlights the cultural and historical backdrop of Austria during that time period, including the revolution and the imperial palace. With beautiful music, captivating performances, and a compelling plot, The Great Waltz is a must-watch for fans of biographical dramas and music.
During the Austrian-Prussian war, Anna Marie is a dancer who is forced to flee her country after she is accused of being a spy. She ends up in a lawless western town in Arizona, where she uses her charms and dancing skills to transform herself into "Salome" during her dance routines.
High Note is a surreal musical journey that follows a conductor's quest to find harmony in a world of chaos. With a playful mix of animation and live-action, the film takes viewers on a mind-bending trip filled with hiccups, hatching eggs, and a dog playing fetch with a treble clef. As the conductor navigates through surreal landscapes and encounters eccentric characters, he learns the true power of music to bring people together.
A musical based on the life and music of Johann Strauss, Jr.
In 'The Million Hare,' a rabbit named Bugs Bunny competes in a game show to win a million dollars. Along the way, he faces off against his rival, Daffy Duck, and encounters various challenges and obstacles. With his wit and cleverness, Bugs Bunny navigates the competition and eventually emerges as the winner, becoming a millionaire.
A psychiatrist who probes the mind of traumatized soldiers attempts to unlock the secret that drove a gentle but deeply-disturbed World War I veteran to the edge of insanity.
At night a city bus driver finds an abandoned baby near a stop. A divorced man comes to pick up his excited son for the weekend. A pretty doctor befriends a quadriplegic. Out of this unfolds a delicate story of human relationships, in which tough feelings of sympathy and guilt the protagonists are confronted with different ways of looking at events.
A crumbling art dealer sees in a new talent, the salvation of his business and the redefinition of his life, but first he must convince himself and at the same time change his vision of art.
A conductor, in silhouette against sheet music, leads the title tune, which dissolves into a series of placid landscapes. As the music picks up, we see a water wheel, then a dancing fairy emerges from a whirlpool and begins singing, to the delight of small woodland creatures. The birds awaken sleeping cherubs, who begin their work of harvesting all things blue and adding them to the river. The birds even do their part, harvesting the color blue from the rainbow. Everyone tugs to open a floodgate and unleash the cerulean waters. A swan, festively decorated, leads a gondola of sorts lit by fireflies.
In this musical short, Tex Beneke, Les Brown, and their Orchestras perform multiple numbers.
A series of unrelated sports gags. Archery: The bullseyes make sense when we see where the archer is standing. Billiards: A trick shot: All the balls move together. Ping pong: The spectators eyes follow the ball... Ski jump: A long, long chute and a very short jump. Track: The hurdlers climb the hurdles like ladders. Swimming: The women's champion turns out to be a mermaid. A men's champion demonstrates strokes, ending with the crawl (on the bottom of the pool, on all fours). We see dives, ending with a seedy bar. Crew: We pull back from the first three precision rowers to see a real mess. Bicycle track racing: "Monotonous, isn't it?" Baseball: A talkative catcher gets knocked back by the ball. Football: Avery Memorial Stadium, with every seat on the 50-yard line one row wide and hundreds tall. On field: The QB calls signals and hops around. A ref emerges from under a pileup: "Is it a touchdown? Mmm, could be." The play is diagrammed into a huge tangle. Auto racing: The winner is...
It's ice skating time. After a few generic ice-skating gags, we get to the main story. An animal falls through the ice, and a pig doing W.C. Fields (W.C. Squeals, apparently) calls for help from a Saint Bernard dog. The dog dispenses a drink, and Squeals begins scheming to get some himself. First he tries faking his own fall through the ice, but the dog sees through it and downs the drink himself. Then Squeals tries using a dish of bones and a magnet, but the magnet falls through the ice and gets stuck around a fish. The fish then swims through a liquor spill from the dog's casket; the drunken fish grabs an ax and, swimming in a circle, dunks another skater. He then latches onto Squeals' skates, and hauls him into an ice-skating contest, where the fish-induced antics win him first prize. Squeals fills the loving cup from the dog's cask, and the fish swims off with it.
A woman in a coma tries to figure out what got her there.
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