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Many full-length films were produced in the 1930s. Sound films ("talkies") were a global phenomenon by the early 1930s. Advances in color film included Technicolor and Kodachrome. The year 1930 is the start of "the golden age of Hollywood", which through at least the 1940s. The studio system was at its height in
Behind the Make-Up: Robert Milton: William Powell, Fay Wray, Kay Francis: Drama: Paramount Famous Lasky [27] The Benson Murder Case: Frank Tuttle: William Powell, Paul Lukas, Natalie Moorehead: Mystery melodrama: Paramount Famous Lasky [28] Beyond the Law: J. P. McGowan: Robert Frazer, Louise Lorraine, Lane Chandler: Western Rayart [29] Beyond ...
Pages in category "Films set in the 1930s" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 535 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Top Ten Money Making Stars Poll were polls on determining the bankability of movie stars. They began quite early in the movie history. At first, they were popular polls and contests conducted in film magazines, where the readers would vote for their favorite stars, like the poll published in New York Morning Telegraph on 17 December 1911. [1]
You Can't Take It with You: United States: 1939: At the Circus: United States: Bachelor Mother: United States: The Cat and the Canary: United States: Comedy horror The Cowboy Quarterback: United States: Dancing Co-Ed: United States: East Side of Heaven: United States: Escape to Paradise: United States: musical comedy Fifth Avenue Girl: United ...
Title Director Cast Country Notes 1930: The Big House: George W. Hill: Chester Morris, Wallace Beery, Robert Montgomery: United States: Prison film [1]: Born Reckless: John Ford, Andrew Bennison
A list of American films released in 1940. American film production was concentrated in Hollywood and was dominated by the eight Major film studios MGM , Paramount , Warner Bros. , 20th Century Fox , RKO , Columbia , Universal and United Artists .
Rear projection in color remained out of reach until Paramount introduced a new projection system in the 1940s. New matte techniques, modified for use with color, were for the first time used in the British film The Thief of Bagdad (1940). However, the high cost of color production in the 1940s meant most films were black and white. [1]