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Warner Bros., Academy Award winner for the Best Original Screenplay [82] The Dawn Trail: Christy Cabanne: Marceline Day, Miriam Seegar: Western: Columbia [83] Derelict: Rowland V. Lee: George Bancroft, Jessie Royce Landis: Adventure: Paramount-Publix [84] The Devil to Pay! George Fitzmaurice: Ronald Colman, Loretta Young, Myrna Loy: Comedy ...
February 28, 1930 A Lady to Love: March 15, 1930 The Girl Said No: March 20, 1930 Montana Moon: March 22, 1930 Free and Easy: April 12, 1930 This Mad World: April 19, 1930 The Divorcee: Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture April 26, 1930 Children of Pleasure: Technicolor sequences May 2, 1930 Redemption: May 3, 1930 Strictly ...
Boots! Boots! (1934) Radio Parade of 1935 (1934) Those Were the Days (1934) Boys Will Be Boys (1935) Dandy Dick (1935) The Ghost Goes West (1935) No Limit (1935) Off the Dole (1935) So You Won't Talk (1935) Captain Bill (1936) Cheer Up (1936) Educated Evans (1936) Excuse My Glove (1936) The Interrupted Honeymoon (1936) It's Love Again (1936 ...
B. The Babe; Back Street (1941 film) The Bad Poet; The Ballad of the Sad Café (film) Bandini (film) The Beautiful Summer (film) Beauty (2009 film) Before Stonewall
Oscar nomination for Best Sound Recording [40] March 2, 1930: Beau Bandit [41] March 16, 1930: Framed [42] March 21, 1930: Lovin' the Ladies: Premiered in New York City, wide release April 6, 1930 [43] April 11, 1930: Alias French Gertie: Premiered in New York City, wide release April 20, 1930 [44] April 18, 1930: He Knew Women
Despite the crude photography and recording, and the minuscule budget of £3,000, Boots! Boots! became an enormous hit. It was reissued in 1938, in a shortened 55-minute form, to capitalise on Formby's later fame; for six decades this abridged version was the only one in circulation, until an uncut, 80-minute print was located and restored for ...
A list of American feature films released in 1933. Hollywood was dominated by the eight major studios Fox Film, MGM, Paramount, RKO, Warner Brothers, Columbia Pictures, Universal Pictures and United Artists. Cavalcade won Best Picture at the Academy Awards.
These films were produced from the silent era through the 1950s and early 1960s, but were most popular in the 1930s and 1940s, reaching their zenith during World War II. Although Hollywood continued to make films characterized by some of the elements of the traditional woman's film in the second half of the 20th century, the term itself ...