Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Sally" is a popular song written by Leo Towers, Harry Leon and Will E. Haines. It was first sung by Gracie Fields in the 1931 film Sally in Our Alley. [1] [2] [3] "Sally" was released on His Master's Voice as the B-side of the record "Fall In and Follow the Band". [4] Merseybeat group The Koobas covered the song in 1967 and released it as a ...
Back Roads is a 1981 American romantic comedy film starring Sally Field and Tommy Lee Jones.It is directed by Martin Ritt.It got middling reviews and grossed $11 million at the box office.
The sole television commercial was a confusing minimalist close-up shot of a man's head (John Brockman); after 30 seconds the man smiled and the name HEAD appeared on his forehead. [6] This ad was a parody of Andy Warhol 's 1964 film Blow Job , [ citation needed ] which only showed a close-up of a man's face for an extended period, supposedly ...
"Sally in Our Alley" is a traditional English song, originally written by Henry Carey in 1725. [ citation needed ] It became a standard of British popular music over the following century. [ 1 ] The expression also entered popular usage, giving its name to a 1902 Broadway musical and several films including Sally in Our Alley , the 1931 screen ...
It stars Sally Field, Tom Hanks, John Goodman, and Mark Rydell. The film was produced by Daniel Melnick and Michael I. Rachmil and was released on October 7, 1988. It grossed $21.0 million in the United States and Canada, against a budget of $15 million. [ 1 ]
The wide, bright, satiric world of “Bottoms,” director and co-writer Emma Seligman’s second feature, expands and contracts as needed. One minute it’s a sincere portrait of a teen ...
'Convoy' is a bad joke that backfires on the director. He has neither the guts to play the movie straight as melodrama nor the sense of humor to turn it into a kind of 'Smokey and the Bandit' comedy. The movie is a big, costly, phony exercise in myth-making, machismo, romance-of-the-open-road nonsense and incredible self-indulgence."
Richie and Fonzie are back together again. At the Emmys, Ron Howard and Henry Winkler took the stage in a “Happy Days” reunion of sorts, in honor of the show’s 50th anniversary. On a re ...