"Follow That Dream" (1962)
THE BANK SCENE - My favorite scene from this movie, which is also one of my favorite Elvis movie.
Elvis Presley (Toby Kwimper), Herbert Rudley (as Endicott), Howard McNear (as George) and Anne Helm (as Holly) in 'Follow That Dream' (1962). Red West is in the first picture, playing a bank's security guard, uncredited role.
"Follow That Dream" (1962)
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For “The Mothers-in-Law" it’s Roger C. Carmel, Kaye Ballard, Eve Arden, and Herbert Rudley
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Do you remember the first time I came to see you in your office? Your dingy, gloomy office in that dingy dirty street, the rotten smell of the factory chimneys pressing down on the shabby little houses, the slovenly old women, the gray-faced dirty little children starting out with everything against them. I remember that street.
Decoy (dir. Jack Bernhard, 1946)
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The Black Sleep (1956)
aka Dr. Cadman's Secret
United Artists
Dir. Reginald Le Borg
Lon Chaney Jr. as Dr. Munroe (aka Mungo)
Basil Rathbone as Sir Joel Cadman
Patricia Blake as Laurie Munroe
Herbert Rudley as Dr. Gordon Angus Ramsay
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From the Golden Age of Television
Reward! One Million - DuMont - October 23, 1951
A presentation of "Cosmopolitan Theatre" Season 1 Episode 4
Drama (set during World War II in France)
Running Time: 60 minutes
Produced by Sherman Marks
Directed by David Pressman
Stars:
Beatrice Straight as Maria
Dennis Hoey as M. Abbe
John Newland as Col. Scharf
Herbert Rudley as Count Gervaise
Michael Howard as Saron
Joseph Anthony as Dr. Duport
Maurice Shrog as Marcel
Gilbert Green as Lt. Metzger
Sara Floyd as Agnes
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9 settembre … ricordiamo …
9 settembre … ricordiamo …
#semprevivineiricordi #nomidaricordare #personaggiimportanti #perfettamentechic
2022: Jack Ging, Jackson Lawrence Ginghoff, attore statunitense. Interprete prevalentemente televisivo. Sposò Kate, poco dopo aver terminato le scuole superiori. Successivamente la coppia divorziò e nel 1956 Jack sposò Gretchen Graening che gli diede un figlio; divorziarono nel 1973. Cinque anni dopo Ging sposò Sharon Ramona Thompson e la coppia ha avuto due figli. (n.1931)
2019: Robert Frank,…
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The Young Lions(1958)
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Decoy
If the science underlying Jack Bernhard’s DECOY (1946, TCM, YouTube) were any loopier, the film would be a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination. High-living moll Jean Gillie comes up with a plan to save boyfriend Robert Armstrong from the gas chamber so she can find out where hid the loot from an armored car robbery. Knowing that methylene blue is an antidote for cyanide poisoning, she seduces gang leader Edward Norris into arranging to have Armstrong’s body stolen after the execution and doctor Herbert Rudley into administering the drug. Miraculously, it not only cures Armstrong but helps get his heart beating again. At one point Rudley injects it into the dead body as if the non-beating heart could circulate it to his failed organs. With skills like these, he could run a YouTube channel for anti-vaxxers. The craziest thing about all this, however, is that the film works. It’s a Monogram picture, so Bernard didn’t have the money for any great photographic effects, but he keeps it moving quickly and gets in some nice character details. And the script — by Nedrick Young from a story by Stanley Rubin — has some fun digressions, like a medical prison orderly who’s reading the dictionary to improve his mind (though he can’t figure out how to pronounce “dichotomy”). It also has Sheldon Leonard as a police detective attracted to Gillie. He has a way of growling out tough-guy dialog so even a howler like “Don’t let that face of yours go to your head” has the ring of authority. Best of all is Gillie, a British actress in her first of only two U.S. film roles. Her Margot is one of the most cold-hearted femmes fatales in the genre, a worthy companion to Barbara Stanwyck’s Phyllis Dietrichson and Ann Savage’s Vera. The film’s ads warned, “She’s the kind of woman who treats men the way they’ve been treating women for years,” which makes her a murderous Mae West. That’s reflected in the film when Leonard saves a young innocent from a lech pretending to be a producer, and the doctor dumps his nurse (the very good Marjorie Woodson) for Gillie, who really is turning the men’s tactics against them, though in the eyes of 1940s morality, she still has to be punished. As Leonard warns her, “People who use pretty faces the way you use yours don’t live very long anyway.”
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THE JAYHAWKERS!
Paramount, 1959. Directed by Melvin Frank. Camera: Loyal Griggs. With Jeff Chandler, Fess Parker, Nicole Maurey, Henry Silva, Herbert Rudley, Frank deKova, Don Megowan, Leo Gordon, Shari Lee Bernath, Jimmy Carter, Renata Vanni, Berel Firestone, Allan Wyatt, Charles Bail, Ned Glass, Richard Shannon, Barbara Knudson, Max Power, Joe Forte, Tony Regan, Howard Joslin.
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Leslie Brooks-Paul Henreid-Herbert Rudley "La cicatriz" (Hollow triumph) 1948, de Steve Sekely, Paul Henreid.
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Roger C. Carmel, Kaye Ballard, Eve Arden, and Herbert Rudley for “The Mothers-in-Law”
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This 1956 throwback to the classic Universal horror of the '40s strikes at your hosts' hearts and brains! It's THE BLACK SLEEP from director Reginald LeBorg starring horror icons Basil Rathbone, Lon Chaney Jr, John Carradine, Bela Lugosi and Tor Johnson.
Context setting 00:00; Synopsis 27:29; Discussion 43:18; Ranking 59:22
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The Black Sleep (1956)
aka Dr. Cadman's Secret
United Artists
Dir. Reginald Le Borg
Herbert Rudley as Dr. Gordon Angus Ramsay
Patricia Blake as Laurie Munroe
George Sawaya as Subject K6, the Sailor
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