Released Date:
1948-07-08
Languages:
English, French, Italian
Countries:
USA
Runtime:
107 min
Rated:
APPROVED
IMDB Ratings:
7.5 (6091 Reviews)
Director:
Charles WaltersSidney Sheldon (screenplay)
Frances Goodrich (screenplay)
Albert Hackett (screenplay)
Frances Goodrich (original story)
Albert Hackett (original story)
Don Hewes and Nadine Hale are a dancing team, but she decides to start a career on her own. So he takes the next dancer he meets, Hannah Brown, as a new partner. After a while this new team is so successful, that Florenz Ziegfeld is interested in them, but due to the fact, that Nadine Hale dances also in the Ziegfeld Follies Don says no. In spite of the fact, that he is in love with Hannah, he keeps the relation to her strictly business. So Hannah is of the opinion, that he is still in love with Nadine, and her suspicion grows, when he dances with Nadine in a Night Club Floor Show.
Released Date:
1949-12-30
Languages:
English
Countries:
USA
Runtime:
98 min
Rated:
PASSED
IMDB Ratings:
7.7 (11270 Reviews)
Adolph Green (screenplay)
Betty Comden (screenplay)
Adolph Green (based upon the musical play whose book was by)
Betty Comden (based upon the musical play whose book was by)
Jerome Robbins (idea)
Three sailors - Gabey, Chip and Ozzie - let loose on a 24-hour pass in New York and the Big Apple will never be the same! Gabey falls head over heels for "Miss Turnstiles of the Month" (he thinks she's a high society deb when she's really a 'cooch dancer at Coney Island); innocent Chip gets highjacked (literally) by a lady cab driver; and Ozzie becomes the object of interest of a gorgeous anthropologist who thinks he's the perfect example of a "prehistoric man". Wonderful music and terrific shots of New York at its best.
Released Date:
1953-11-26
Languages:
English, French, Italian
Countries:
USA
Runtime:
109 min
Rated:
APPROVED
IMDB Ratings:
7.2 (4011 Reviews)
Director:
George SidneyDorothy Kingsley (screenplay)
Sam Spewack (book)
Bella Spewack (book)
Fred and Lilly are a divorced pair of actors who are brought together by Cole Porter who has written a musical version of The Taming of the Shrew. Of course, the couple seem to act a great deal like the characters they play. A fight on the opening night threatens the production, as well as two thugs who have the mistaken idea that Fred owes their boss money and insist on staying next to him all night.
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