Two showgirls, one a gold-digger and the other a romantic, embark on a cruise ship in search of love and diamonds. Along the way, they encounter romance, comedy, and plenty of song and dance.
At the Circus (1939) tells the story of a bankrupt circus that is struggling to stay afloat. With the help of the Marx Brothers, they try to find a financial solution to save the circus. The film is filled with comedy, music, and musical performances.
Iphigenia, the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, faces a terrible fate as she becomes the sacrificial offering to the gods in order to secure victory in the Trojan War. Betrayal, guilt, and religious fanaticism take center stage in this tragic story.
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.
His Wedding Night is a silent comedy film about a man who is mistaken for a kidnapped man and forced into a chaotic wedding night. With comedic fights, romantic rivals, and unpredictable situations, the film showcases the hilarious consequences of mistaken identities and the mayhem that ensues.
In Moscow 1953, four terrified women prisoners are brought before Joseph Stalin, who chooses the beautiful Dasha. He punishes her by shaving off her long hair. Moments later, a plastic surgeon leads Stalin into the operating room and transforms his face so that he is unrecognizable. He vanishes, but OSS agent Steve Anderson searches for him in Europe.
A Navy lieutenant is sent to investigate a smuggling operation in the Caribbean. Along the way, he encounters various challenges and confrontations as he tries to uncover the truth behind the operation.
In this early cinema experiment, a man checks into a haunted hotel and encounters various supernatural events, including objects moving by themselves and a flying witch on a broomstick. The film combines stop-action and stop-motion animation techniques to create a spooky and humorous atmosphere.
This Keystone from the end of 1914, involving the usual suspects running around some plumbing issues will not hold many surprises for those familiar with Keystone in this period, or, indeed, with the works of the Three Stooges, who often played inept plumbers. It is, nonetheless, very nicely performed, especially by Charles Murray who mugs it up freely and ineptly, as well as the pretty girl who plays the house's maid.
After arranging for wifey to land a job as the café's cashier, Mann warns her not to reveal that they're married, lest proprietor Slim Summerville fire them both. The trouble begins when both Summerville and headwaiter Bobby Dunn fall for Pierce, driving Mann into paroxysms of insane jealousy.
One of the early color near-nudie films and was re-shown often by, mostly, drive-in theatre owners in need of a quick cash fix. They would hang out the "Adults Only" sign, thereby ensuring that every high school and junior high boy (and more than a few dads) within an hour's drive would storm the gate, and turn on the pop corn machine and then hot-foot it to the night-deposit at the bank. "Not Tonight, Henry" (the actual title and not an alternate title as some seem to think) was a large step up in quality for director W. Merle Connell in that it was in color and also not just a static-camera filming of a burlesque show inside of one of L. A.'s smoky, grind house burlesques. The girls were still out of burlesque, as were Hank Henry and Little Jack Little: Hank Henry is more than a little frustrated at the "lack of attention" he is getting at home from his wife and starts dreaming up amorous escapades with sirens from the past...
A man has lost his memory. He has no idea who is is, why he has woken up in a grungy motel room, or why people are trying to kill him.
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