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A Dangerous Woman is a 1929 American Pre-Code film released by Paramount, based on the Margery Lawrence story, A Woman Who Needed Killing. It was directed by Gerald Grove and Rowland V. Lee from a script by John Farrow and Edward E. Paramore Jr. [1] [2]
The Dangerous Woman, character portrayed by Virginia Madsen in the 2006 film A Prairie Home Companion; Dangerous Woman (South Korean TV series), 2011 South Korean soap opera also known as Dangerous Women; A Dangerous Woman, 2014 South Korean short film; winner of the Mise-en-scène Short Film Festival's Ollehtv Audience Award
This Woman Is Dangerous is a 1952 American film noir and crime drama by Warner Bros. starring Joan Crawford, David Brian, and Dennis Morgan in a story about a gun moll's romances with two different men against the background of her impending blindness.
A Dangerous Woman (1929) - Frank Gregory; The Four Feathers (1929) - Lt. Jack Durrance; Charming Sinners (1929) - Robert Miles; The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1929) - Sherlock Holmes; The Marriage Playground (1929) - On-Screen Trailer Host and Narrator (uncredited) The Laughing Lady (1929) - Daniel Farr; Slightly Scarlet (1930) - Hon. Courtenay ...
The Office Scandal (1929) as Andrew 'Andy' Corbin; Girls Gone Wild (1929) as Boogs; A Dangerous Woman (1929) as Peter Allerton; The Man I Love (1929) as Carlo Vesper; Broadway (1929) as 'Scar' Edwards; Paris Bound (1929) as Richard Parrish; Woman Trap (1929) as Eddie Evans; The Last Performance (1929) as Buffo Black; Dynamite (1929) as Young ...
The following is a list of American films released in 1929. The Broadway Melody won the Academy Award for Outstanding Picture at the 2nd Academy Awards , presented on April 3, 1930. A–C
A woman dubbed the Black Widow after she murdered her husband with a poisoned curry on his birthday could walk free from prison within weeks. The Parole Board granted Dena Thompson’s bid to be ...
A Dangerous Woman is a 1993 American romantic drama film directed by Stephen Gyllenhaal. [1] The screenplay was written by his wife Naomi Foner, loosely based on the award-winning novel of the same name by Mary McGarry Morris. The feature was co-produced by Amblin Entertainment and Gramercy Pictures.