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Cast Genre Notes The Call of the Circus: Frank O'Connor: Francis X. Bushman, Ethel Clayton: Drama: Pickwick Pictures [50] Call of the Flesh: Charles Brabin: Ramón Novarro, Dorothy Jordan, Ernest Torrence: Musical/Romance/Drama: MGM. [51] In partial Technicolor. Call of the West: Albert Ray: Dorothy Revier, Tom O'Brien, Alan Roscoe: Western ...
Fry flees, terrorizing a movie audience at Radio City Music Hall at gunpoint, and eventually taking the ferry to the Statue of Liberty. Kane pursues Fry onto Lady Liberty's torch. Fry accidentally falls over the platform's railing and clings to the statue's hand. Kane tries to rescue him, but as the police and FBI arrive, Fry falls to his death.
The film is the first of four in which Cary Grant was cast by Hitchcock, and it is one of the rare occasions that Grant plays a sinister character. Grant plays Johnnie Aysgarth, an English conman whose actions raise suspicion and anxiety in his shy young English wife, Lina McLaidlaw ( Joan Fontaine ). [ 136 ]
Liberty Pictures was an American film production company of the 1930s. Part of Poverty Row, the company produced low-budget B pictures. It was one of two companies controlled by the producer M.H. Hoffman along with Allied Pictures. The company produced its first film, Ex-Flame, loosely based on the Victorian novel East Lynne, in 1930.
Although not a financial success upon its release due to its bloated budget, the film is acclaimed by critics and launches Harlow as one of the 1930s' biggest stars. August 9: Cartoon character Betty Boop appears for the first time on screen, in the animated film Dizzy Dishes. September 3: The Hollywood Reporter is first published.
Liberty, a Daughter of the USA was the first purely Western serial, although Western elements were included in earlier serials such as The Perils of Pauline (1914). [3] A print of Liberty was one of the primary footage sources used for the compilation film The Revenge of Pancho Villa (1930–36).
The actress helped inspire the look for the famous logo, one of several actresses ordered by Columbia Pictures to pose as Miss Liberty, for which she was only paid $25. (Photo: Tim Boyle ...
Paramount's first 100% all-Technicolor (two-color process) all-talking picture. April 26, 1930: Ladies Love Brutes: All-Talking May 2, 1930: The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu: May 3, 1930: The Big Pond: May 10, 1930: The Texan: May 17, 1930: Young Man of Manhattan: May 24, 1930: The Devil's Holiday: May 31, 1930: True to the Navy: June 7, 1930 ...