Grace Kelly and John Lund on the set of High Society, 1956.
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The cast of My Friend Irma gets ready to go west. L to R: John Lund, Marie Wilson, Dean Martin, Diana Lynn, Jerry Lewis, Corinne Calvet.
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NOIR CITY 20 at Oakland's Grand Lake Theatre Day 9: Matinée-NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES (1:00) & ALL MY SONS (3:00). Matinée screenings introduced by Alan K. Rode. Evening shows by Eddie Muller. Full festival and tickets: www.NoirCity.com
1:00 PM
NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES
In this rarity, Edward G. Robinson stars as John Triton, a phony vaudeville mentalist who is one day cursed with the actual ability to predict the future. Gail Russell is the heiress who seems doomed by Triton's vision of her death. Or is it a scheme to steal her impending inheritance? John Farrow, a director at his most stylish in noir terrain, adapts from the novel by master of suspense Cornell Woolrich. Co-starring John Lund and William Demarest. Universal Pictures struck this print exclusively for NOIR CITY back in 2008.
Originally released October 13, 1948. Paramount [Universal], 81 minutes. Screenplay by Jonathan Latimer and Barré Lyndon, from the novel by Cornell Woolrich. Produced by Endre Bohem. Directed by John Farrow.
3:00 PM
ALL MY SONS
Edward G. Robinson gives one of his most affecting performances as successful businessman Joe Keller, grappling with guilt over having framed his business partner for a crime he committed. When his son (Burt Lancaster) becomes engaged to the convicted man's daughter, the sins of the past come hurtling back. Reis and writer-producer Chester Erskine—aided by the noir-stained cinematography of Russell Metty—create a powerful (and inexplicably rare) version of Arthur Miller's Tony Award-winning play. First time at NOIR CITY!Originally released March 27, 1948. Universal–International, 94 minutes. Screenplay by Chester Erskine, from the play by Arthur Miller. Produced by Chester Erskine. Directed by Irving Reis.
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John Lund-Dorothy Abbott "Mil ojos tiene la noche" (Night has a thousand eyes) 1948, de John Farrow.
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No Man of Her Own, Mexican Lobby Card, 1950
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My Friend Irma Goes West
In the sequel to "My Friend Irma," titled "My Friend Irma Goes West," Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis, alongside John Lund, Maire Wilson, and Diana Lynn, embark on a new comedic journey directed by Hal Walker in 1950.
Up next on my Dean Martin/Jerry Lewis marathon is the sequel to 1949’s “My Friend Irma,” the 1950 film “My Friend Irma Goes West,” directed by Hal Walker and released the same years as their third movie “At War with the Army”. While we see a change of director, the main cast remains the same. Returning with Martin and Lewis are John Lund, Marie Wilson, and Diana Lynn. I must say, this is one of…
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Currently Watching
A FOREIGN AFFAIR
Billy Wilder
USA, 1948
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Gail Russell and John Lund in John Farrow’s NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES (1948)
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Billy Wilder, June 22, 1906 – March 27, 2002.
With John Lund and Marlene Dietrich on the set of A Foreign Affair (1948).
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Clipped from an American magazine
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