Take the Lead is a 2006 film about a dance teacher who volunteers to teach ballroom dancing to a group of troubled inner-city high school students. Through the power of dance, the teacher transforms their lives, teaching them discipline, respect, and the importance of teamwork. Along the way, the students learn valuable life lessons and discover their hidden talents.
The Oyster Princess is a silent comedy film that tells the story of a wealthy princess who is on the quest to find a suitable husband. Set in a world of excessive wealth and capitalism, the princess goes to extreme lengths to find her ideal spouse. Along the way, she encounters various comedic situations, including a boxing match and a mistaken identity. This German expressionism film is a satirical take on royalty and explores themes of wealth, class, and marriage.
In Taxi!, a taxi driver finds himself wrongly accused of a murder and must navigate the dangerous underworld of 1930s New York City to find the real killer and clear his name. Along the way, he discovers a web of deceit, betrayal, and secrets that put his life in danger.
Dangerous Money is a crime mystery thriller film released in 1946. It follows a treasury agent and a private detective as they join forces to track down a gang of counterfeiters. With a plot full of suspense and intrigue, the movie keeps viewers on the edge of their seats.
Ferdie's wife is fox-trot crazy, wanting to go dancing all the time. To get out of it, Ferdie fakes an ankle injury. When his wife spies him walking without his crutch, she writes a letter to her stern mother, inviting her to stay with them while Ferdie heals. Rather than face his mother-in-law, Ferdie admits he was faking his injury, and tears up the letter.
Buddy Rogers and Marian Nixon playing the grown children of feuding German-Americans Frank Morgan and Joseph Cawthorn. Romance blossoms between Rogers and Nixon, while Morgan and Cawthorn continue muttering Teutonic imprecations at one another.
A fictional plot Paramount Headline series short that follows the busy day of the Himber Orchestra. It opens with the band at morning rehearsal, playing the novelty number "Sound Your A." Then to the phonograph-recording studio as they record a disc of the fox-trot ballad, "True Confessions", with band vocalist Alice Marion singing the song. Then to a radio-studio where they play "St. Louis Blues", accompanied by the Selinsky String Quartet and the Adrian Rollini Trio. The day/night finishes at dawn with the band in a nightclub, with singer Stuart Allen vocalizing "Blossoms on Broadway."
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