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Their love affair was the talk of our town! Change comes slowly to a small New Hampshire town in the early 20th century.
"Hell's House" is a 1932 American drama film directed by Howard Higgin. The screenplay by Paul Gangelin and B. Harrison Orkow, set during the waning days of the Prohibition era, is based on a story by Higgin.
When orphaned Jimmy Mason is taken in by his Aunt Emma and Uncle Henry, he meets their boarder Matt Kelly, who impresses the young man with his boastful swagger and alleged political connections, although in reality he's a bootlegger. The boy's life is disrupted when, as one of Kelly's hired hands, he refuses to identify his boss during a police raid and is sentenced to three years of hard labor in reform school, where he befriends a sickly boy named Shorty, who eventually is sent to solitary confinement.
Ken Maynard's palomino stallion, Tarzan, is spotlighted in this action-packed western. Horse thieves are running rampant, decimating rancher's herds. When Tarzan frees one of the herds held by the rustlers, the leader of the gang has the mighty horse declared an outlaw and demands he be shot.
Based on the real-life story of the most successful concentration camp uprising during the Holocaust.
Based on the 1929 semi-autobiographical novel A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway, with a screenplay by Oliver H.P. Garrett and Benjamin Glazer, the film is about a romantic love affair between an American ambulance driver and an English nurse in Italy during World War I.
A Marine stationed in the Philippines loses a hand in an accident and is discharged from the Corps. When the Japanese invade the Philippines, he is called back into service to rescue a general held by Filipino guerrillas behind Japanese lines. Attaching a steel prosthetic in place of his missing hand, he and his men set out on the mission, which turns out to be not quite what he was told it was.
Ship engineer Jim Taggert is rescued from a torpedoed tramp steamer by Joe Morgan, an American gangster that found New York too hot for him, and has become a fisherman operating from an out-of-the-way island off of the coast of South America. Morgan makes his headquarters at the Halfway House run by the parents of Maria Styx as a bar and dance resort catering to the planters and traders of the island. Taggert finds himself practically a prisoner along with a group of American girls acting as entertainers at the resort. Taggert shadows Morgan in his activities in a remote cove and finds that Morgan is supplying German U-boat commanders with torpedoes, but does not know that Morgan has rigged the torpedoes with clock devices that explode when at sea and sinks the U-boats.
A young woman jeopardizes the relationship with the man she loves when a no-account from her past shows up.
Abbott & Costello's version of the famous fairy tale, about a boy who trades the family cow for magic beans.
Ernest Bliss (Cary Grant) is a rich socialite suffering boredom. He makes a bet with a doctor, Sir James Aldroyd, that he can live a year without relying on any of his inherited wealth. He loses the bet for £50,000 when he has to draw money to wed poverty stricken Frances Clayton (Mary Brian), to save her from an unhappy marriage of convenience.
Cold War "comedy" made by Arch Hall, Sr., one of his last attempts to make Arch Hall, Jr., into a media star. (Jr. went on to become an airline pilot.)
Arch Hall Jr. is an American actor and musician who appeared in six indie films during the 1960s all produced by Nicholas Merriwether, the pseudonym of his father Arch Hall Sr.
When a trio of small time hoods disguise themselves as priests to escape a police dragnet, they find even just masquerading as religious people has its effects. Co-star Freddie Bartholomew's last film before retiring from acting.
A crazed scientist accidentally turns himself into a half ape, half human creature, and scrambles to find a cure.
In depression era NYC, an angry street kid begins a life a crime after his father is sentenced to death for a crime he didn't commit.
The East Side Kids find a young girl in the apartment of a man who has just been murdered. Believing her to be innocent, they hide her in their clubhouse while they try to find the real killer. The killer, however, used a baseball bat as his murder weapon, and the bat has the fingerprints of one of the gang on it.
Lum and Abner work at a general store in Arkansas. There they get involved in some misadventures with the locals.
Lum Edwards is annoyed with his partner in Pine Ridge's Jot-'em-Down general store, Abner Peabody, because Abner has swapped their delivery car for a racehorse. Lum is also too timid to propose to Geraldine, so he involves Abner in a "rescue" effort which nearly gets both of them killed. They try again, and this time Geraldine is impressed. Lum writes a proposal note, but Abner, by mistake, delivers it to the Widder Abernathy, who has been ready to remarry for years. This puts Lum in a peck of trouble until the sheriff appears with the Widder's long-gone and hiding husband.
After a concert pianist loses his hands in a car crash, a surgeon grafts on a pair of a murderer that appear to have a mind of their own! Loosely based on the novel The Hands of Orlac. Watch for a young Sally Kellerman.
Claiming to be a federal marshal, Gerald Eskith (Dan Duryea) arrives in Virginia City, armed with a subpoena for Jason Blaine (Fred Beir). Eskith demands that Jason accompany him to San Francisco to testify in the trial of the notorious Murdock gang. Although he owes his life to Eskith, Adam Cartwright is suspicion of the self-styled lawman, and insists upon accompanying the two men on their long and dangerous journey.