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Carnival Story is a 1954 drama film directed by Kurt Neumann, produced by Frank King and Maurice King, starring Anne Baxter and Steve Cochran, and released by RKO Radio Pictures. It was made as a co-production between West Germany and the United States.
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The Houston Story: 1956: 1997: Columbia Pictures (CST Entertainment Imaging, Inc.) [314] Human Desire: 1954: 1992: Columbia Pictures (American Film Technologies) [315] Hum Dono: 1961: 2011: Navketan films [316] The Human Comedy: 1943: 1990: Turner Entertainment [317] The Hunchback of Notre Dame: 1939: 1988: Turner Entertainment [318]
The film was retitled Texas Carnival in November 1950. [5] In December 1950 MGM announced Charles Walters would direct. Filming started February 1951. [6] Prior to shooting, the Red Norvo Quintet, which backed Miller on the song "It's Dynamite," included Charles Mingus on bass. The group pre-recorded the number as normal, but when it was time ...
Gun Crazy (also known as Deadly Is the Female) [1] is a 1950 American crime film noir starring Peggy Cummins and John Dall in a story about the crime-spree of a gun-toting husband and wife. [2] It was directed by Joseph H. Lewis , and produced by Frank and Maurice King .
It stars Leslie Caron as a touchingly naïve French girl whose emotional relationship with a carnival puppeteer is conducted through the medium of four puppets. The film won the Academy Award for Best Original Score, [2] and was also entered in the 1953 Cannes Film Festival. [3] It was later adapted for the stage under the title Carnival! (1961).
Roustabout is a 1964 American musical feature film starring Elvis Presley as a singer who takes a job working with a struggling carnival. The film was produced by Hal Wallis and directed by John Rich from a screenplay by Anthony Lawrence and Allan Weiss.
His Majesty O'Keefe is a 1954 American adventure film directed by Byron Haskin and starring Burt Lancaster. The cast also included Joan Rice, André Morell, Abraham Sofaer, Archie Savage, and Benson Fong. The screenplay by Borden Chase and James Hill was based on the novel of the same name by Laurence Klingman and Gerald Green (1952). [3]