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Title Director Cast Genre Notes The Age for Love: Frank Lloyd: Billie Dove, Edward Everett Horton, Lois Wilson: Comedy: United Artists: Air Eagles: Phil Whitman: Lloyd Hughes, Norman Kerry, Shirley Grey
A list of British films released in 1931. By this point the British film industry had completed the conversion from silent to sound films . Prominent British production companies included British International Pictures and Gainsborough Pictures .
Below is an incomplete list of feature films, television films or TV series which include events of the Napoleonic Wars. This list does not include documentaries, short films. This list of movies is not a list of Napoleon movies. This includes films about Napoleon's life after ≈1799.
It received a then-record seven nominations, and was the first film to win more than two awards. The 5th Academy Awards were conducted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on November 18, 1932, [ 11 ] at a ceremony held at The Ambassador Hotel [ 11 ] in Los Angeles, California .
Films about Napoleon, Emperor of the French (1769-1821, reigned 1804-1814, 1815). ... Napoleon (1991 TV series) Napoleon (2023 film) Napoléon (miniseries)
1931: A Co-respondent's Course: Diggers: Pat Hanna: Haunted Barn: Isle of Intrigue: Showgirl's Luck: Siege of the South: Spur of the Moment: 1932: His Royal Highness: On Our Selection: The Sentimental Bloke: Symphony in Steel: 1933: Annette Kellerman Returns to Australia: Short: IMDb: Diggers in Blighty: Pat Hanna: Harmony Row: F.W. Thring: The ...
This is a list of films produced or distributed by Universal Pictures in 1930–1939, founded in 1912 as the Universal Film Manufacturing Company. It is the main motion picture production and distribution arm of Universal Studios , a subsidiary of the NBCUniversal division of Comcast .
It was the second full sound film produced in Hungary, and at first it generated little interest (due to the flop of the first sound movie The Blue Idol, also in 1931) but later became a favorite and is still a beloved oldie. [1] The film was chosen to be part of the New Budapest Twelve, a list of Hungarian films considered the best in 2000. [2]