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Crazy Cruise is a 1942 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon. [1] The short was released on March 14, 1942. [2]It was directed by Tex Avery and Bob Clampett, whose names do not appear on the surviving print of the cartoon.
The cartoon was released on September 5, 1942, and stars Daffy Duck. [2] The film is set in a mad scientist 's laboratory. Adding to the medical theme, the signatures of the personnel credited (McCabe, writer Don Christensen , animator Vive Risto and music composer Carl Stalling ) were featured in the opening credits, just as a doctor would ...
Much Too Shy is a 1942 British comedy film directed by Marcel Varnel and starring George Formby, Kathleen Harrison, Hilda Bayley and Eileen Bennett. [2] The cast includes radio star Jimmy Clitheroe (as George's brother), later "Carry On'" star Charles Hawtrey, Peter Gawthorne and Joss Ambler.
Invisible Agent is a 1942 American action and spy film directed by Edwin L. Marin with a screenplay written by Curt Siodmak. [3] [4] The invisible agent is played by Jon Hall, with Peter Lorre and Sir Cedric Hardwicke as members of the Axis, and Ilona Massey and Albert Basserman as Allied spies.
Jungle Book or Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book is a 1942 independent Technicolor action-adventure film by the Korda brothers, loosely adapted from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (1894). The story centers on Mowgli , a feral young man who is kidnapped by villagers who are cruel to the jungle animals as they attempt to steal a dead king's cursed ...
The film contains an homage to a Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers film. Judy Garland's stunning feathered dress in Easter Parade is a reference to a similar costume worn by Ginger Rogers in the ...
The Affairs of Jimmy Valentine is a 1942 American comedy crime film directed by Bernard Vorhaus and starring Dennis O'Keefe, Ruth Terry, and Gloria Dickson. The film is also known as Unforgotten Crime (American TV title) and Find Jimmy Valentine. The original film was cut to 53 minutes due to its B-movie billing and later for television.
The first film feature of the song was over a decade before, in Holiday Inn (1942), and the second was eight years prior to the holiday hit, in Blue Skies (1946).