Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Night People is a 1954 American thriller film directed, produced and co-written by Nunnally Johnson and starring Gregory Peck, Broderick Crawford, Anita Björk and Buddy Ebsen. The story was co-written by Jed Harris, the theatrical producer. The story is set in Berlin during the Allied occupation in the years following World War II.
Dangerous Mission (1954) - script; Night People (1954) - uncredited contribution to script; Captain Lightfoot (1955) - based on novel, script; Illegal (1955) - script; I Died a Thousand Times (1956) - based on 1941 novel High Sierra, and 1941 film script; Accused of Murder (1957) - based on novel Vanity Row, script
Night People, supernatural individuals in L. J. Smith's novel series Night World Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Night People .
The Three Faces of Eve is a 1957 American drama film presented in CinemaScope, based on the book of the same name about the life of Chris Costner Sizemore, which was written by psychiatrists Corbett H. Thigpen and Hervey M. Cleckley, who also helped write the screenplay.
The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit is a 1956 American drama film starring Gregory Peck and Jennifer Jones, with Fredric March, Lee J. Cobb, Keenan Wynn and Marisa Pavan in support.
In December 1954 Fox announced the film would star Monroe. [9] Sleep It Off was an alternative title. [10] However Monroe refused to make the movie. In January 1955 the studio suspended her and replaced her with Sheree North who had been meant to appear in a film called Pink Tights. [11]
Plot. Willie Bauche, a Hollywood producer, becomes so obsessed with turning his wife, Ann Garantier, into the sexiest star in Hollywood that he neglects her real ...
No amount of thoughtful writing or glib direction, however, can salvage the effort when the plot, after going farther than other films toward investigating a religious quandary in the Graham Greene manner, takes everything back at the end and dissolves into a mass of inspirational sentimentality."